| 22. | 138 | ||
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means I Love You. It goes like this...it's pre txt msg and pagers and is a bad ass underground way to keep it on the down low. For awhile at least. 1=One Meaning - i love you
3=Three Words - i love you 8=Eight Letters - i love you Girl txts guy "c u 2nite, 138" |
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| 23. | 88 | ||
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Morse code for Love and kisses. Used commonly online via chatting, texting on phones, pagers, and recently seen on tattoos. Talaren: Gotta go! 88 Danielle!
Dillymonster: Aww! 143! |
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| 24. | 4556 | ||
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when we still used pagers 4556 used to be the code for good night and sweet dreams : ) 4556 babe ill be thinking about you tonite
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| 25. | Vollie | ||
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Volunteer Firefighter. Characterized by their custom maltese cross back window sticker and general disregard for driving safety while using their "flashers". Can also be spotted easily "off duty" (wal-mart, sonic, dollar general) wearing parts of their on-duty clothes and overtly apparent pagers. Most have a wallet badge and emergency trauma bag in their back seat containing just enough shit to get them in a slightly worse situation than they already are. I had a fender bender and 2 Vollies stopped and held c-spine on me. Needless to say, I didn't panic and "felt" like I would be OK, mostly because they told me I would.
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| 26. | 10 pager | ||
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A ten-page paper or essay. Used especially in college, variants include 5 and 8 pagers. God damn..... Professor gave us another 10 pager to do over the weekend.
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| 27. | Whacker | ||
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EMT, Firefighter or EMT\Firefighter who has a lot of flashing blue or red halogen, strobe or L.E.D lights on their vehicle so that you can see them from a mile away, has at least 1 mobile\hand held scanner or two way radio, wears their squad jacket everywhere in the winter, wears squad\fire department t-shirt every day in the summer. Can be easily spotted by the presence of several pagers on their belt from several different fire departments and\or squads because they want to claim that they run more calls than anyone else. They don't just show up for the good calls, but they get especially excited upon hearing the words "structure fire" or "MVA with entrapment". Often the first person at the squad building or the firehouse when the call goes out because they were listening to their scanner or radio. Firefighter 1: Hey, man, have you met the new guy yet?
Firefighter 2: Yeah, he's already a member at 2 other fire departments before he joined here. Firefighter 1: What a whacker! |
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| 28. | call your office | ||
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Before the advent of mobile communication devices (pagers, mobile phones), someone at a public event might be summoned over the public address system to "call your office", indicating that an urgent message was waiting for them. In this context, the phrase is used to imply that someone is unaware of important information - i.e. that their arguments are uninformed and therefore superfluous. Your argument is wrong at every level. You should really call your office.
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