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The study of a community's dual ecological environments. Internal ecology refers to the dynamics of relationships, roles, niches, and resource distribution within the community—its social ecosystem. External ecology is the community's relationship with its physical environment and other surrounding communities. The theory examines how changes in one ecology (e.g., external climate change) force adaptations in the other (internal social structure).
Example: A fishing village faces an external ecological shift: fish stocks collapse. Internal and External Ecology Theory analyzes how this forces a change in the internal ecology: the social role of "fisher" shrinks, new niches like "aquaculturist" or "tourist guide" emerge, and power dynamics shift away from fishing families. The two ecologies are in constant, stressful dialogue.
by Dumuabzu February 5, 2026
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International Fart

Used as another form of "big idiot".
"You international fart, you big fat. Shut up your mouth"
by definedathadiya February 12, 2026
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international school accent

An “international school accent” is a dialect of English that is mostly US/Canadian, but is shaped by exposure to other dialects such as English, Australian, and Kiwi, as well as the local language where the speaker grew up, or the speaker’s heritage language.

An international school accent is most often spoken by an international school student, but generally by people who grew up in environments where multiple native English dialects co-existed.
“Why do you say ‘half a tomato’ like that?”
“I have an international school accent.”
by the riverside February 15, 2026
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