rare pepe

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See also: Rare Pepe and rare Pepe

English

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Noun

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rare pepe (plural rare pepes)

  1. Alternative letter-case form of Rare Pepe.
    • 2015 May 29, “Wills”, in The Arrow, Westlake Village, Calif., page 11, column 1:
      I, Hope Prendiville, of creative mind and meh body, will my rare pepes to the meme team.
    • 2016 March 28, Hannah Hunt, “Teen of the Week”, in The Tilghman Bell, volume 92, number 8, Pacudah, Ky.: Paducah Tilghman High School, page 5:
      If you ever catch a glimpse of this rare pepe, you will meme dank for eternity.
    • 2016, Mark Littler, Benjamin Lee, editors, Digital Extremisms: Readings in Violence, Radicalisation and Extremism in the Online Space, Palgrave Macmillan, published 2020, →ISBN, page 99:
      Paid chattering class content creators have written about and continue to write about our memes like cuckservative, echo brackets, and rare pepes. (Murray 2016b)
    • 2016, The Argo, Boston, Mass.: Boston Latin School, page 32, column 1:
      In Ten Years, You'll Find Me... [] Analyzing rare pepes
    • 2022 March, “Timeline: From Coloured Coins to the NFT Revolution”, in FinTech, page 16:
      In 2016, people began using Counterparty to issue ‘rare pepes’ – a type of internet meme that centres around a green frog and has a cult following. When Ethereum gained popularity in 2017, these rare pepe memes were sold there and even led to the creation of a “decentralised meme marketplace” called Peperium where they could be bought and sold
    • 2023 February 3, “Ordinals & Inscriptions: Satoshi-based NFTs on Bitcoin”, in Bitfinex[1], archived from the original on 3 February 2023:
      This means people spending Bitcoin could have higher fees and long confirmation times on-chain, as they compete with transactions which include large amounts of non financial data like rare pepes (in the case of Counterparty), DNS info (in the case of BitDNS, which later became Namecoin), or in the most recent iteration, Inscription content data (in the case of Ordinals).