by taylor margaret August 6, 2004

by PersonGuy101 November 30, 2017

by Sleep October 1, 2003

When you help your mom clean and prep the thanksgiving day Turkey for stuffing and you get a raging hard on by fisting the bird’s cavity.
We were up at 6 am prepping the Turkey and I did the old thanksgiving stuff n’ stiff. I was fisting that bird just like my uncle fisted me last year.
by Dick Onchin November 24, 2020

Verbal method of denoting a closing parenthesis, whether reading aloud from a printed source or simply clarifying the punctuation of your own thoughts.
The sentence "The box weighs 2 kilograms (4.4 pounds)" may be read as:
"The box weights 2 kilograms, y' know, 4.4 pounds, n' stuff."
"The box weights 2 kilograms, y' know, 4.4 pounds, n' stuff."
by Jose Jarrell September 20, 2005

Literary devise paired with the object of the sentence preceeding it. Used to elaborate greatly on the general idea of a statement, commonly used to describe aspects of boating and/or outdoor education.
If you are caught driving your personal watercraft at speeds in excess of 27.3 miles per hour, the U.S. Coast Guard will take the vessel, the trailor it was towed on, as well as the vehicle you drove in, and then proceed to take your children, rape your wife, shoot your grandparents in the face with a semi-automatic weapon, and then burn your house down, with the rest of your family in it, and piss on the ashes, n' stuff
by dirty savage indian man January 29, 2004

a suffix added to random words, normally used when someone is trying to indicate to you that they are experienced-n-stuff. Can be replaced by "or something of that sort.". Small indication of not-'care'ingness.
by sj0r April 30, 2003
