sugar bush

Canadianism for a maple syrup (and maple sugar) farm. So-called because these operations harvest sap from wild maple trees, so the "farm" is actually forest, known in Canada as "the bush."

It has nothing to do with a woman's sweet sweet pubic area, although it sure does sound like it.
"Jacques and me, we went down to Yvette's sugar bush to get some sweet, sweet syrup, eh?"
by Adman12 October 24, 2005
mugGet the sugar bushmug.

Footloose bad

Old Gen-X adjective to describe a quality of music that makes it sound like something from the soundtrack of the movie "Footloose."

Distinguishing features are keyboard whitewashes, fist-pumpingly over-the-top vocals in the chorus, and unmanly bouncing rythyms. In other words, sounding '80s in the bad way.
(When Dan Hill's "I can dream about you" comes on the radio...)

"Oh, man, that's bad! It's... like... Footloose bad!"
by Adman12 October 11, 2005
mugGet the Footloose badmug.

Chicken Pizza

An intentional malapropism used by English-speaking tourists to refer jokingly to Chichén Itzá, the impressive ruins of a large Pre-Columbian Mayan city and religious complex in Mexico's Yucatan region.
"Yeah, we partied all night in Cancun, then had to get up early to catch the bus to see Chicken Pizza."
by Adman12 October 20, 2005
mugGet the Chicken Pizzamug.

Whitewater Shafting

When he saw the waterbed in her dorm room, he knew he was in for some whitewater shafting.
by Adman12 June 12, 2008
mugGet the Whitewater Shaftingmug.

bush

Old Canadianism for forest or wilderness. Usually phrased as "the bush."
"Roughing it in the Bush," by Susanna Moodie, is a surprisingly unsexy account of pioneer life in mid-19th Century Canada.
by Adman12 October 24, 2005
mugGet the bushmug.

poker chip

Noun: Nip, as in woman's nipple. So-called because it is the size, shape and colour of a red poker chip. Plus, they sometimes poke out of a blouse.
"I think I saw a little poker chip action in that picture."
by Adman12 October 05, 2005
mugGet the poker chipmug.