See Also: out
"In" is a term, commonly used by Esmé Squalor, to describe something that is fashionable and trendy. It is the opposite of "out", a word that is literally defined as something that has gone out of style.
In[]
- Anything with chocolate sprinkles
- Aqueous martini[1] (later "out")
- Ballet shoes
- Big noodles
- Blue cereal bowls
- Blue flowers
- Buttermilk in a carton
- Café Salmonella (later "out")
- Carmelita Spats
- Chocolate
- Cigarettes
- Cotton balls
- Crime
- Caligari Carnival (later "out")
- Darkness (later "out")
- Eating al fresco (eating outside)
- Flowers
- Garbage cans with the letters of the alphabet stenciled all over them
- Glass
- Globes
- Herring Houdini (TV series only)
- Italian food[2]
- Infamy and injustice (Because they have the word "in" in them)
- Light[1]
- Llamas
- Magenta wallpaper
- Milton Friedman Hall (TV series only)
- Money
- Ocean decorations, including giant Red Herring statue
- Orphans[1] (originally and later "out")
- Parsley soda[1] (later "out")
- Pianos
- Pinstripe suits[1]
- Postage stamps
- Poison Darts
- Rutabaga
- Salmon
- Spain's Largest Handkerchief
- Stairs[1]
- Stiletto heels with literal daggers for heels[3]
- Triangular picture frames
- Vacuum cleaners
- Vases
- Veblen Hall (later "out") (TV series only)
- Veritable French Diner
- Very Fancy Doilies
- Yellow paper clips