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Panikos is a pretty popular name for a boy who lives in Cyprus or any island off of Greece. Panikos’ are generally not very tall but are very muscular. They love to drink and smoke but they don’t mess with that hard shit. It usually take people a while to remember Panikos, so nicknames include: Peeen, Paniko, Greek Boy, and Sexy Peen
Jack: “Damn, look at Panikos over there he’s so thiccc.”

polikoff 

To eat free filthy/dirty food.

Derived from the greek word poli-koffinos (dirty-fucking-cheap-slob)

A further examination of Polikoff in Greco-Roman mythology finds that a shit Demon was also named Polikoff.
1. Hey dude the cat wizzed on that pizza that you just ate. You just polikoffed!!!

2. Why did you polikoff my dump? You knew it wasn't chocolote!!!
polikoff by Prober September 8, 2004
Poniso means to set as an example. In other traditions Poniso means to be surprised excited /happy after seeing something(s) for the first time ever.
Kibona Poniso!
poniso by Poniso March 5, 2020
Ponion
Noun
A ponion is both a potato and an onion.
John: UGHHHH!! My face looks like a potato and an onion!
Harry: Ooh so you're a ponion?
Ponion by That Emo Kid June 28, 2016

Ponicorn 

A Ponicorn is part Pony, part Unicorn. They are rare creatures that only speak in Dolphin with the occasional Monkey sound. Ponicorn's are highly sought after pets as they can grant you 2.75 wishes.

It is a well known fact that Richard Branson, Oprah and Justin Bieber own Ponicorn's, however for obvious reasons they keep them hidden from the public.

If you ever meet a Ponicorn, repeat three portmonteaus in a row and it will give you a gift. Gifts range from small cars, cases of Canadian domestic beer, etc...
I saw a Ponicorn in the forest last night and it gave me this hickey.

I heard Oprah's Ponicorn poo's Christmas TV's!

Justin Bieber's Ponicorn wish was the reason he was in that Brazilian brothel.
Ponicorn by Berns-2013 December 19, 2013

Panikozaire 

Very complex term, long etymological story: from the French "Panique au Zaire", referring to popular urban revolutions in colonial Congo, when cities were being looted and white colonists chased out of their villa's. Black urban youngsters in Congo picked up all kinds of headlines from the newspapers and radio-bulletins, and turned them into insults, slang and creative poetry.
(It's in these colonial contexts, like in South Africa and Zaire in the 1950s, that rap developed).

When the Belgian colonizers were becoming more repressive and the Congolese came to understand just how heavily they were being exploited, they often created little urban uprisings, to scare off the White Man. They also used code language to fool the cops.
These "gangsters" used to run through the streets, ironically shouting "PANIKOZAIRE! PANIKOZAIRE" at the white cops and the white wives who hid behind the walls of their chique villas.


Nowadays, tough people (in the French bidonvilles and ghettos) still use it in an ironic way, to scare others off.

Instead of scaring whitey with something like "I'm going to murder you right here right now", just shout PANIKOZAIRE, smile and grab his wallet.
Panikozaire. Now give me all your money.
Panikozaire by lourenço September 14, 2004