When you laugh so hard that when you fall backwards, you get a bruise on your buttocks, much like the bruiseyou would get if you fell backwards on roller skates.
The "vuvuzela fail" peeing dog youtube video made me laugh so hard that I rollerlol'd off my chair.
A highly addicting game, sequel to rollercoaster tycoon. Better than the first or the third, this game is simple enough to pick up quickly but not lacking in features.
A weed rollercoaster is a occurance that happens when you smoke at least 3-4 bowls of weed and when you sit back and relax and empty your mind it feels like your riding a rollercoaster.Sometimes if you roll your eyes back you feel as if you come out of your body and you have a feeling of extreme bliss.Its quite annoying if you are starting to ride a rollercoaster and some one trys to talk to you or snap you out of it.You know if someone just got done riding cause they will have a large smile on there face.
1; a roller coaster is simply a train on steroids, it is a train that runs on a track excepted it can do all kinds of maneuvers such as hills, loops, corkscrews, banked turns and the list just keeps going
Coasters are becoming better and better to the day because of the "battle" that is going on between theme parks across the world. The goal is to be the park that is known for its coasters, better than any other. Cedar point, a very popular theme park is only popular for its record breaker's. It is home to the first coaster to go over 200 feet, the first coaster to go over 300 feet, and the first coaster to go over 400 feet.
I am very aware that it is "roller coaster" not "rollercoaster" I just had to make it one word.
the act of giving or recieving dome on a rollercoaster: stimulating the male reproductive organ by gently (or violently) carressing and surrounding the male genitalia in a female's oral cavity
girl: can i ride the magnum with you?
boss: but i want togo with your friend...
girl: ill give you rollerdome on the way up
boss: alrigghhhht
The term Emotional Rollercoaster was coined by Dr. N. Amundson in dealing with unemployment, first in a research article: Amundson, N.E., & Borgen, W. (1982). The dynamics of unemployment: Job loss and job search. Personnel and Guidance Journal, 60, 562-564. It was most likely made popular when Nelson Canada published their booklet At the Controls:Charting your course through unemployment in 1987. Approximately 960,000 copies of this book were bought by the Gov't of Canada and distributed to people dealing with unemployment between 1987 and 1996.
"Shock! Relief! Sadness! Excitement! Frustration! Lack of energy! Hopelessness! Determination! People feel many different emotions when they are out of work. these feelings may be a bit different from one person to another depending on how you lost your job, how long you have been out of work, your future possibilities, and whether you can provide for your family or others who depend on you.
However, many of the unemployed people we talked with described similar patterns of emotions. They described these feelings as an "emotional rollercoaster" that kept them off balance… " (Amundson and Borgen, At the Controls, 1987)