Jeni Lynn
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Jeni Lynn
Signed in as:
filler@godaddy.com
2172's hottest products and venues sourced throughout the galaxy, including Europa, Ceres, Triton, and soon the Oort Cloud.
New items added frequently!

/em’:go͞o͞k:yo͞o͞ bi:f/ n. the result of a conglomerate of Japanese and American ranchers who have bread and raised cattle on Uranus’ moon, Miranda
/ˈer-(ˌ)ōˈ-käth/ n. a pristine remnant of planet formation with two bodies combining to form a larger one; located more than six billion km from the Sun in the Kuiper belt; Native American term meaning "sky" in the Powhatan/Algonquian language
/ȯ-(ˌ)tōv/ n. large, automated heating device for cooking food
/ˈbed-fərd ber-ˈzher/ n. famous risqué dance show performed at The Bedford above Triton; numerous famous performers have started their careers at the Bedford, one of the less expensive entertainment venues in the Solar System
/ˈsē-'ōt/ n. carbonated reddish alcoholic beverage made from Charite, a liquid found on the Pluto moon Charon

/ˈsir-(ˌ)ēz/ n. the only dwarf planet in the inner Milky Way Solar System; a watery planet with a thin atmosphere; a rocky, dusty crust, and large mineral deposits
/ˈsir-(ˌ)ēz ˈkri-stᵊl/ n. mined from minerals on the dwarf planet Ceres; coveted by collectors throughout the Solar System for its purity
/ˈker-ən/ n. the largest of Pluto’s five moons; the largest known satellite relative to its parent body; named after the ferryman in the underworld that carried souls over the river Acheron
/ˈchȯk-māt/ n. chocolate dessert biscuits dusted with Mate, a dark, sweet, flour-like substance from Neptune's moon Proteus
/ˌdez-də-ˈmō-nə/ n. one of Uranus’ small, inner moons; the surface consists of dark, unprocessed, carbon-rich material suitable for propagating various fruits during its Fall season; named after Othello’s wife in William Shakespeare’s play, “Othello, the Moor of Venice”

/en-ˈse-lə-dəs/ n. a Saturn moon; in 2098, astrobiologists discovered large bodies of liquid water below the moon’s icy surface
/en-ˈse-lə-dəs ˈkän-ˌflikt/ n. intersolar war, 2125-2130, fought mainly at Enceladus; during the conflict, many soldiers became trapped when their ships malfunctioned and endlessly circled the Saturn moon; when governments finally signed the Enceladus Treaty of 2130, ships raced to rescue the soldiers, but most had died when their oxygen had run out; less than fifty soldiers had been saved; in 2167, a mining ship recorded the last discovery of a fighter that had crashed on the surface
/ˈer-is/ n. a dwarf planet in the Solar System that has oceans of liquid water; named after the Greek goddess of discord and strife
/yu̇-ˈrō-pə/ n. one of Jupiter’s moons; it features a vast ocean, energy, and chemical elements that support the moon’s bustling economy; the moon’s high security prison houses the Solar System’s most dangerous and violent criminals
/ˈfraŋ-kən ˈmär-bəl/ n. stone, similar in looks to Calacatta gold marble, excavated from the Frankin mines on Pluto's moon Charon

/gʌm:ə:gæd/ n. nano space glue patented by the famous inventors Al and Lee
/ku:ɪ:pɚ belt/ n. a doughnut-shaped region of icy bodies extending far beyond Neptune’s orbit; home to Pluto, Arrokoth, and Farout; hundreds of thousands of objects in the region are at least sixty miles wide in size
/ˈlünəs/ n. a famous brand of non-carcinogenic cigar made with Cigan leaves grown in Cigans Inc.’s greenhouses on Jupiter's moon Europa
/ˈmärz/ n. fourth planet from the Sun; Solar System’s seventh largest planet; source of numerous materials, including Marsirium; Jezero Base, located just outside the northeast rim of Mars’ Jezero Crater; nickname: the Pioneer Planet
/'märz-er-ē-əm/ n. element mined on Mars; symbol: Mar; atomic number: 327; vast storage capabilities; discovered 2171
/mə'ræn.də/ n. Uranus’ closest moon; one-seventh as large as Earth’s moon; named for one for Prospero’s daughter from Shakespeare’s play the Tempest
/ˈmä-lik-ˈjen/ n. technology that makes an object invisible; science in its infancy as of 2170

/ˌȯrg-ˈber-ē/ n. an edible, multi-colored, tart berries from the Org plant found on Uranus' moon Desdemona; can only be harvested during the moon’s Fall season
/ˈpyü-sō-ˈdō-tər/ n. a mineral found on planet-remnant Arrokoth; astrobiodefense experts are unsure if the mineral carries any dangerous microbes that might threaten humanity; status: quarantined
/ˈprō-ˌtyüs/ n. Neptune’s second largest moon; among the darker objects found in the Solar System
/ˈrō-mənz ‘spȯ/ n. Venus’ most exclusive spa; opened Jan. 1, 2172; location: floating in the planet’s clouds where the weather is cooler than on the surface and the atmospheric pressure is similar to Earth’s surface
/ˈsa-tərn/ n. the second largest planet in the Solar System and sixth planet from the Sun; made mostly of hydrogen and helium; about eighty moons; called the Jewel of the Solar System because of its ring system

/ˈshä-ˈshä/ n. a non-alcoholic drink made using Shasha enzymes from Saturn; different flavors
/ˈtrī-tᵊn/ n. Neptune’s largest satellite; the only large moon in the solar system that orbits its planet in the opposite direction; its dynamic climate features a steady flow of organic material snowing on the surface
/ˈyu̇r-ə-nəs/ n. the seventh planet from the Sun and third largest in the Solar System; four times windier than Earth; surrounded by faint rings; atmosphere consists of hydrogen, helium and methane, making Uranus blue; more than twenty-four moons
/ˈvē-nəs/ n. the second planet from the Sun, and sixth largest and hottest planet in the Solar System; its surface is hot enough to melt lead; named for the Roman goddess of love
/ˈvikt-tē/ n. exclusive women’s wear designed by Victoria Victi
/ˈzē-kē ˈsȯs/ n. an extremely spicy sauce used in foods; created from Ziki seaweed native to Jupiter's moon Europa
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