White House advisor Kellyanne Conway produced a more expansive definition of her much-mocked notion of “alternative facts” in an interview published Saturday.

“Additional facts and alternative information,” she told New York Magazine – like “Two plus two is four. Three plus one is four. Partly cloudy, partly sunny. Glass half full, glass half empty.”

Conway used the phrase in January as a defense of White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer, the day after he scolded the press for its reporting on the size of President Trump’s inauguration crowds.

She also explained her “Bowling Green massacre” gaffe, a reference to a supposed terrorist attack on the Kentucky city that never actually happened, as a simple slip of the tongue.

Conway had intended, she said, to talk about the “Bowling Green masterminds,” a pair of Iraqi al-Qaeda supporters who were arrested in 2011 after attempting to send weapons to overseas terrorists.

“Excuse me, I’ve spoken 1.2 million words on TV, okay?” Conway said. “You wanna focus on two here and two there, it’s on you, you’re a f—ing miserable person, P.S., just whoever you are.”