| 39. | Hork | ||
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To loot a corpse
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| 1. | hork | ||
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1. v
to quickly eat. 2. v to vomit or belch in a manner like that of vomiting. 3. n vomit 4. v to steal or pilfer, usually pertaining to items of little value. 5. v screw up, make dysfunctional 6. v to sell (a bastardization of *hawk*) 6. v do (can mean essentially anything) i horked it down, then i horked it back up. then he horked my hork, and horked it to this guy who was totally horked up. then i horked my sister
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| 2. | hork | ||
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v. to steal something, though not usually applicable to shoplifting or grand theft. I turned around for five minutes and someone horked my pepsi from the fridge at work.
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| 3. | Hork | ||
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1. To vomit.
2. The summoning of phlegm, in preparation for spitting. "My cat horked a big hairball on the sofa"
"John horked up a loogie and spit it at Jessica." |
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| 4. | hork | ||
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To take, without asking, something that if you would have asked, the answer would have been yes. Note: This is a slang expression popularized by Bob & Doug MacKenzie's Strange Brew Soundtrack album Literal usage: "I horked a beer from your fridge."
Common usage: "Can I hork a pencil?" Note: the common usage is ironic, because you are asking when the definition involves not asking. |
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| 5. | hork | ||
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To eat in a greedy and expedient manner. v.,adv.; hork, horked, horking 1)I horked all the cookies so I didn't have to share.
2)I've only got 5 minutes to hork down this sandwich before heading back to the condom factory. |
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| 6. | hork | ||
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to throw, screw up, break, yank, spit, spit on, or throw up on I horked the thing too hard, and now it's horked. So I horked it against the wall and then horked on it.
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| 7. | Hork | ||
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Verb: to take something from someone,usually without physical force, but with a confidence bordering on arrogance.
(to hork, from the French horque) also...horks,horked,horking,horker My big brother horked my Redline and jumped it into a pond.
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