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Love
(rîk) rickate, ricking, rickify
verb, transitive
  • To pile into ricks.
  • To deliberately do as much or as little as you want with your own anonymous bandwidth or technological space.  On a whim, with ease and fluidity.


[Middle English reke, from Old English hrêac.]


See also:


Ricknophobia
(rik-ne-fo´bê-e) noun
  • A persistent, abnormal, or irrational fear of stacked, tangled or thatched things or situations that compel one to avoid the feared tangles.
  • Strong fears, dislikes, or aversions of, or by: rick.
[From Late Latin -phobia, -phobia.]


Ricknophile
(rik-ne-fil') noun
  • One that loves or has a strong affinity or preference for straw, thatching, or tangled heaps of fibrous materials.
  • Loving; having a strong affinity or preference for or by: rick.
[New Latin -philus, from Greek -philos, beloved, dear, from philos, beloved, loving.]


Rickware
(rik-wâr)') noun
  • The emotional, physical or spiritual state of decay caused by straw, thatching, or tangled heaps of fibrous influence in modern technological environments..
  • A collective weave or thatching of technological implementations, into patterned heaps or piles, especially for protection from toil or fodder.
[Middle English, from Old English waru, goods.]