![]() Sag alooooooo!Įxample: My, those are sagilent shoes you're wearing today. (sometimes followed by Have you got one on you?)Įxample: You've got egg on the telly. Sag aloo: To be very annoyed, often due to a trivial matter. I'll just mulitply it by the Safstrom-Phillips Non-Constant and use whatever I get. Which is just a good name for the day's expected home temperature. Merely multiply whatever answer you do have by the Safstrom-Phillips Non-Constant. Safstrom-Phillips Non-Constant: When faced with a complicated equation that persistently refuses to work out, Jim: Oh yeah, Bob, you're real safisterated. Jim: That's gross, what if someone sees it? Safisterated: Someone pretending to have etiquette. Saffronious: Hard to get, over-priced, over-rated, and completely unnecessary.Įxample: I finally found that Neil Sadaka demo tape on 's saffronious. Safety: Warning to others nearby that you expect to flatulate. Sometimes they will end up saving the day for you (hence the name safety) when you're out of cigs and craving like a madman.Įxample: I'm smoked out. Safety: An unfinished cigarette that is purposely extinguished so it can be saved and re-lit later on. Safe (!): An agreement used in place of OK or Sounds good.Įxample: John: do you want to go to the movies today? Used mainly to describe someones slavish adherance to pop fashion or music.Įxample: A: Look at him. With the crackers is a perfect example of being sacrelicious. Getting drunk from communion wine in church because it tastes really good and goes well Homer uses it a bunch on The Simpsons.Įxample: Mmmm, that hedonistic pagan girl is sacrelicious. Sacrelicious: Really good, but also really evil. Frequently used in the Army.Įxample: Private Wilkinson, you had best sack up and jump out of this airplane.Įxample: Sacred pig, Sarah! You can't play Nintendo at all. Sack Up: To gain bravery, or be outgoing in manner. Sacagrub: Dental floss, toothpick, something that removes food particles from teeth.Įxample: As she finished her meal she asked the waitress for a sacagrub so she wouldn't have to brush her teeth. Sabi yo: A greeting using sabi as a variation of the popular wasabiand yoĪs the general term for the person being greeted.Įxample: Friend walks into room: Penguinn, sabi yo? Men have been known to go 100%0 miles to see an s2.Įxample: Let's head up to Ontario this weekend to check out some s2. S2: Brown-eyed, sweet, cute, hot chick that lives in, oh yeah! Canada. S/he: Way to refer to a person of unknown gender, formerly he/she.Įxample: If s/he wants to become a firefighter, then s/he must be able to lift 150 lbs. Field: From Douglas Adams' _Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy._ Phenomon in books andmovies where the populace at large completely ignores something strange and otherwise very noticeable, because it's only of concern to the main characters.Įxample: Fan1: There's a giant BAT flying above New York! Nobody noticed? S-cubed: S^3, from Skanky Sea Smell, something that reminds you of that unsavoury aroma created by a beach full of kelp and dead fish.Įxample: No way am I eating this this paella-it's S-cubed.Įxample: A: Seeya later, I'm going to the pub. S'up: Short version of What's up? Usually stated forcefully, not with an inflected, questioning final syllable. S'truth: Australian exclamation of surprise or disgust. S'sup: A greeting, like S'up, but cooler. But hey, s'all good.Įxample: When Joe-Bob apologized for missing Bob-Joe's birthday, Bob-Joe just said, S'ok. Used either when things are going well, or sarcastically when things are going terribly.Įxample: Yeah, I have three papers due tomorrow morning.
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