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Adjective: A word used to discribe somethinga as very large in size.
That building is yango!
Yango by AnnieRo April 29, 2009

Yango Sauce 

The term meaning in which someone sucks to much dicks and the substance that comes out before the semen is called yango sauce.
People like Jason who have a serious disorder in being normal or fitting in, cannot take the pressure so therefore must suck things including penis for fun. When they do yango sauce comes out they are very careful to catch some in a cup so it can be used for dipping and for "big macs". Next time u get some yango sauce either ask a professional yango sauce catcher or try it on your own.

Ying Yang Spinny Thang

It's used to refer to a turbo for combustion engines. commonly used In shinyodd's streams when he plays automation the game. I honestly don't know how he didn't realize what it is.
"Add a ying yang spinny thang to it"

ying-yanging 

when a black person and a white person 69. It makes the shape of a "ying yang" sign, thus the title "ying-yanging"
When Tiger Woods and his wife (or other varius white chicks) are ying-yanging, the Chinese proverb who came up with that sign turns in his grave.
ying-yanging by nycbabe88 October 22, 2010

Up The Ying Yang 

1) To be overwhelmed, overloaded. Anytime your hands are full.
I got work up the ying yang
Up The Ying Yang by Jay Denson September 28, 2005

Ying Yang 

Chinese world view also rested heavily on yinyang principles. Yinyang was a philosophical view in Chinese society of a unity of opposites, each representing the greater and lesser of similar concepts, which one found in the universe. An example would be the yinyang representation of husband and wife. Yang are the dominant principles of maleness, the sun, creation, heat, light, Heaven, dominance, and so on. Under yin are the submissive principles of femaleness, the moon, completion, cold, darkness, material forms, submission and etc… This unity of one greater principle over a lesser one moves in cyclical path so that no single one is all dominant. These yinyang principles were part of a larger philosophical view of a cosmos (our universe) that was “self-contained, self-operating, spontaneously generating and perpetually in motion.” The Chinese viewed everything in this cosmos as a series of interrelating objects and forces that worked and “resonated” with one another, creating harmony and order. This proceeded off of the Taoist principles of a natural and unified cosmetic pattern.
Ying Yang Examples:
Husband-Wife
Sun-Moon
Fire-Water
Father-Son
Mother-Daughter
Light-Darkness
Heaven-Earth
Ying Yang by Cameron Mulick September 18, 2008