| 1. | tow-rope | ||
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what happens after tabbogining. See also the jerry Yeah the tow-rope is hard, but it's worth it to tabbogin back down.
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| 2. | Tow Rag | ||
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Often spelt as Toe Rag or toerag. Originally was Tow Rag from the red rag tied to the end of a truck carrying a long load (in England) or the rag tied to the rope towing another vehicle so people would not decapitate themselves by going through the gap. Pretty well the rear end of everything and of no other use. (Being poilte here) "you useless tow rag"
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| 3. | Mexican Tow Truck | ||
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Any car or truck used to pull a broken down vehicle with an inadequate rope. My friend pulled me home today with his mexican tow truck. At one point we were going almost alomost 70 mph. It was one of the most dangerous things I've ever done.
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| 4. | Pennsylvania tow truck | ||
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Any motor vehicle towing another vehicle by using rope, string, cords, cables, lassos, lariats, hawsers, or any other line-like device that is of poor quality. Excludes actual tow trucks. Should look comical to non-Pennsylvanians. {While driving on an on-ramp to I-70 in Pennsylvania}
Spencer: Did you see that? A Ford F-350 was pulling an old Ford Escape using a thirty foot long yellow seatbelt-like cable. There was someone steering the Escape too, since the cable was so long! Ryan: Yea, that's just an ordinary Pennsylvania tow truck. |
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| 5. | go slack | ||
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To take up the slack. To pull in or make taut a loose section of a rope, line, wire, etc. verb 1. to make tighter, or more tense or taut, as a rope; remove slack; Cason noticed slack in the tow rope and yelled, "go slack".
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| 6. | towboard | ||
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Snowboarding while being towed by a snowmobile/ATV. Mutch like wakeboarding, except on snow, with a snowboard. towboarder 1: "Dude you wanna go towboardin?"
towboarder 2: "Yea, but my tow-rope is broke! You got one?" towboarder 1: "Maybe, I'll see what i can find." |
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| 7. | Tow Rag | ||
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Means a low-life, scum, or loser. Originally a British Royal Naval term. This was a long piece of rope, either frayed at the end, or with a bit of rag tied to the end of it, permanently fixed to a ship, which was dangled into the sea, and therefore, towed, next to the wooden plank with a hole in it which was secured over the edge of the ship, used as a toilet. After the sailor had finished his ablutions, he lifted the rope out of the water, and then wiped his rear-end clean with the wet, frayed end of the rope, and when he finished wiping, the soiled end of the rope was dropped back into the sea to clean itself as it was towed along by the ship. a Towed Rag. You Tow rag...
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