Swear

To curse or 'cuss'. Swears are considered inappropriate to use in public places, but are less offensive than other profanities. These 'bad words' are often referenced by pre-adolescents by their first letter (the 'f' word, the 's' word, even 'h-e-double-hockey-sticks').
I swore in the privacy of my room, and nobody was offended.
by Diggity Monkeez March 22, 2005
mugGet the Swearmug.

Rocko's Modern Life

A genuinely hilarious show on Nickelodeon in the mid-1990s. 'RML' was an ingenious parody of 1990s life, poking fun at big businesses, coffee shops, credit cards, and many other things. Since it was on a children's network, the show's creators had to throw in some 'potty jokes,' as much of the show's true humor was too highbrow for the average ten year-old.
Rocko's Modern Life still airs on Nicktoons TV, but I don't think that very many people receive that channel.
by Diggity Monkeez December 18, 2004
mugGet the Rocko's Modern Lifemug.

PU

1) A way of saying, "That smells awful."

2) Official scoring of a pop-up in baseball.
1) PU, Dennis! Haven't you ever heard of deodorant? Or at least breath mints?

2) A pop-up caught by the second baseman is scored as 'PU4'.
by Diggity Monkeez January 20, 2005
mugGet the PUmug.

Grammar

An obsolete part of language in teenage America. Some people blame AIM, others blame TV.
I'm in an honors English class, yet the grammar in it is rather appalling. Misplaced commas, horrid spelling, and run-on sentences seem to be vital parts of English papers now. However, this may have to do with the fact that I attend a school in Georgia.
by Diggity Monkeez November 24, 2004
mugGet the Grammarmug.

Kenny Lofton

MLB center fielder who is shared by all thirty major league teams.
So they're going to let the Phillies use Kenny Lofton this year, eh?
by Diggity Monkeez February 28, 2005
mugGet the Kenny Loftonmug.

Drive Up a Wall

To bother or annoy to a large extent.
The word 'owned' drives me up a wall.
by Diggity Monkeez February 12, 2005
mugGet the Drive Up a Wallmug.

Jim Rome

A radio show host who isn't afraid to tell it like it is. Unfortunately, his version of "telling it like it is" involves constructing his opinions with the most obvious statements in sports.

For example: "Yeah, right, Barry. You're not on steroids. Your head has just tripled in size over the last four years naturally." Is that really something that listeners have never heard before?
Honestly, does Jim Rome have any fresh things to say? And by fresh, I mean new/original, not smart/sassy.
by Diggity Monkeez May 02, 2005
mugGet the Jim Romemug.