Steve's definitions
One who is so bad at the game of foosball, that he actually makes others he plays with or against equally as bad. Just by looking that this person, you will go bad...for life. Some might call this person a "Total Loser", this is incorrect. He is a fooser.
by steve February 6, 2003
Get the Foosermug. by steve September 5, 2003
Get the dampermug. Cliff's in the toilet doing a data downlad
by Steve January 12, 2005
Get the data downloadmug. Standing in a corridor (at school/work etc) with your back against a wall and using your bum to push yourself away from the wall, and using it to cushion your return to the wall. Can be used to pass the time while waiting for a class to begin/person to arrive. Is closely related to bum walling.
1) Hey dude, you are so late. I've been wall bumming for the last five minutes.
2) I was wall bumming for so long i marked the wall.
2) I was wall bumming for so long i marked the wall.
by Steve September 2, 2005
Get the wall bummingmug. White Dude: Dude i fucked a black chick last nite
Black Dude: Yooo you my boy...
White Dude: Yeah
Black Dude: You hit it from behind
WHite Dude: Yeah
Black Dude: Ok kay Kay Kaaayy!!!
Black Dude: Yooo you my boy...
White Dude: Yeah
Black Dude: You hit it from behind
WHite Dude: Yeah
Black Dude: Ok kay Kay Kaaayy!!!
by Steve December 19, 2004
Get the Ok Kay Kaymug. The best band ever! Formed in Jasper Tennessee in 2004 it is by far the sound of the future with hit songs such as "I Live in a K-Mart Bag" "Playing Laser Tag With Boris" and their power ballad "Forbidden Love"
by Steve May 9, 2005
Get the cmmug. A theropod dinosaur which, due to recent finds, currently holds the coveted title of "biggest meat eating dinosaur", displacing Giganotosaurus, which in turn displaced Tyrannosaurus Rex.
Spinosaurus was relatively obscure among the general public until it was featured in the film Jurassic Park III, where it replaced the T-Rex as the film's primary antagonist, appearing on JPIII's logo and and killing one in a breif fight near the beginning of the film. This defeat, however, did little to sway the popularity of T-Rex; indeed, many fans reacted negatively to the outcome of the fight. Dinosaur fans often debate the true outcome of such a battle, though in reality it could never take place due to the Spinosaurus and Tyrannosaurus living on different continents and existing millions of years apart from eachother. It is generally thought that the Tyrannosaurus' superior jaw strength would give it an advantage in such a battle.
However, the depiction of the Spinosaurus in JPIII as an unstoppable superpredator was inaccurate. Its delicate, bony dorsal fin and long, gator-like snout armed with straight, peglike teeth (as opposed to the ribbed, serrated fangs of theropods such as T-Rex), indicate that this beast was a specialised icthyovore as opposed to a hunter of large dinosaurs, growing massive on a diet of fish, as well as pterosaurs, crocodiles and just about anything else it could swallow whole.
Spinosaurus is closely related to Baryonyx and Suchomimus, but not to the similar looking Dimetrodon, which lived before the age of the dinosaurs.
Spinosaurus was relatively obscure among the general public until it was featured in the film Jurassic Park III, where it replaced the T-Rex as the film's primary antagonist, appearing on JPIII's logo and and killing one in a breif fight near the beginning of the film. This defeat, however, did little to sway the popularity of T-Rex; indeed, many fans reacted negatively to the outcome of the fight. Dinosaur fans often debate the true outcome of such a battle, though in reality it could never take place due to the Spinosaurus and Tyrannosaurus living on different continents and existing millions of years apart from eachother. It is generally thought that the Tyrannosaurus' superior jaw strength would give it an advantage in such a battle.
However, the depiction of the Spinosaurus in JPIII as an unstoppable superpredator was inaccurate. Its delicate, bony dorsal fin and long, gator-like snout armed with straight, peglike teeth (as opposed to the ribbed, serrated fangs of theropods such as T-Rex), indicate that this beast was a specialised icthyovore as opposed to a hunter of large dinosaurs, growing massive on a diet of fish, as well as pterosaurs, crocodiles and just about anything else it could swallow whole.
Spinosaurus is closely related to Baryonyx and Suchomimus, but not to the similar looking Dimetrodon, which lived before the age of the dinosaurs.
by Steve October 15, 2006
Get the Spinosaurusmug.