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Puckleberry

A semi-canon pairing between Noah "Puck" Puckerman (played by Mark Salling) and Rachel Berry (played by Lea Michele) from FOX's new TV show, Glee.
They shared 1 episode together of yummy-ness where they were actually dating. Since then there have been small moments of Noah's OOCness where he is sweet to/regarding Rachel.
It is currently the most popular (non-canon) pairing for Rachel.
He is the school's badass bully and she's the school geek thats a bit bossy, they are both incredibly talented when it comes to singing and when they are together they bring out the best qualities in each other.
Dude, who do you ship for, Finchel, Puckleberry, or St. Berry?
Is that even a question, duh Puckleberry they blow Finchel and St. Berry out of the water, even Mark and Lea ship for them
Puckleberry by Lea-Lotus15 July 7, 2010
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Puckleberry

The canon pairing between Noah Puckerman and Rachel Berry. The name itself was made canon when Rachel spoke it in 'Bad Reputation.' The couple only lasted one episode but sparked a huge fan reaction resulting in large amounts of fanfiction, fan videos, manips, and other various fan arts as well as various fansites, RPGs and fan blogs. The fan base is still very large and incredibly active, despite the episode in which the ship originated and ended in (1x08 - Mash Up) having aired on 10/21/09.
Fangirl: What is your OTP?
Fanboy: Puckleberry! They're a couple of good looking Jews. It's natural.
Puckleberry by LAMRM October 31, 2010

Puckleberry

From the TV show Glee, the ship Rachel and Puck.
Gleek no. 1: Puckleberry for life! They are SO cute together!
Gleek no. 2: Eww. No. Way. That relationship was totally going NOWHERE.
Puckleberry by Lilandi December 13, 2009

Suckleberry Fin 

Attaching a live salmon to a pregnant female's breast with the goal of filling the fish with breast milk before broiling the fish in its own juices and serving it covered in a handmade blackberry compote.
"I went to this new hipster restaurant in Five Points and left as soon as I saw what their house Suckleberry Fin special was all about."
Suckleberry Fin by DTP Dominos December 1, 2018

Huckleberry Friend 

Evokes someone with whom one has a carefree, innocent, hopeful, gentle friendship. Bucolic wanderers and dreamy wonderers. Those with which to share a sun-drenched youth.
"As a child, Johnny Mercer, (lyricist of the song 'Moon River'), picked huckleberries (like wild blueberries) in the summer. To him, the berries had a personal connection with a carefree boyhood, strengthened by association with Mark Twain's character Huckleberry Finn. The implication was that Holly Golightly, who was actually of hillbilly stock, and Huckleberry Finn might well have been friends, if ever they had met." from 'Love Me Tender: The Stories Behind the World's Favourite Songs' by Max Cryer.

Oh, dream maker, you heart breaker
Wherever you're going, I'm going your way.
Two drifters, off to see the world
There's such a lot of world to see
We're after the same rainbow's end,
Waiting round the bend,
My huckleberry friend,
Moon River, and me.
Huckleberry Friend by Y9e0ah May 18, 2014

Huckleberry squirts

The violent diarrhea one experiences after excessively gorging themselves on wild berries. Typically experienced during the Summer months, the Huckleberry Squirts can also affect those in urban environments. Nobody is safe
Person 1: Fred Meyer had a sale on blueberries! I'm going to eat then all at once.

Person 2: Careful now, you dont want to get ththe Huckleberry Squirts and shit the bed.
Huckleberry squirts by 🐺 March 27, 2020

huckleberry 

"Huckleberry" was commonly used in the 1800's in conjunction with "persimmon" as a small unit of measure. "I'm a huckleberry over your persimmon" meant "I'm just a bit better than you." As a result, "huckleberry" came to denote idiomatically two things. First, it denoted a small unit of measure, a "tad," as it were, and a person who was a huckleberry could be a small, unimportant person--usually expressed ironically in mock self-depreciation. The second and more common usage came to mean, in the words of the "Dictionary of American Slang: Second Supplemented Edition" (Crowell, 1975):

"A man; specif., the exact kind of man needed for a particular purpose. 1936: "Well, I'm your huckleberry, Mr. Haney." Tully, "Bruiser," 37. Since 1880, archaic.

The "Historical Dictionary of American Slang" which is a multivolume work, has about a third of a column of citations documenting this meaning all through the latter 19th century.

So "I'm your huckleberry" means "I'm just the man you're looking for!"
"I'm your huckleberry..." Val Kilmer as Doc Holliday in Tombstone
huckleberry by kilo February 23, 2005