Zezozose Zadfrack Glutz

In the 1990s, appeared on Usenet newsgroups (e.g., alt.religion.kibology , alt.folklore.computers ) as a bogus "magic word" or "command" to confuse newbies.

. Following the birth, Susan Atkins briefly sought refuge at a religious retreat called the Fountain of the World before returning to the Family. His early months were spent within the nomadic and increasingly violent environment of the cult, just a year before his mother participated in the infamous Tate-LaBianca murders in August 1969. Adoption and Later Life After the arrest and conviction of Susan Atkins in 1969, her parental rights were terminated. Because no members of Atkins' biological family would take responsibility for the child, he was placed in a foster home and eventually adopted by a California family. Renaming: His adoptive parents immediately changed his name from Zezozose Zadfrack Glutz to a conventional one—reportedly

Following the arrest and subsequent conviction of Susan Atkins for her role in the in 1969, her parental rights were terminated. zezozose zadfrack glutz

Over time, internet users invented fake definitions for these three words, e.g.:

In the 1960s–70s, parapsychology researchers collected examples of "spirit control languages" from mediums, some of which produced words like these. In the 1990s, appeared on Usenet newsgroups (e

But specifically, is known among puzzle solvers, conlangers (constructed language fans), and old-school internet humorists as an example of "nonce words" or "placeholder nonsense" used in prank dictionaries, parody linguistic examples, or fake incantations.

If you treat it as a ciphertext:

No known serious decryption yields real English. It’s likely just — nonsense for nonsense’s sake.

The birth of Zezozose Zadfrack Glutz on October 7, 1968, was an bizarre communal event: His early months were spent within the nomadic