Judy Garland, AKA Miss Show Biz, was a wonderfully beautiful actress and singer from the 1930s to the late 1960s, when she unexpectedly died a premature death caused by her drug usage. She's the woman who made "Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas" the Christmas standard it is today, and sung "Over the Rainbow" in The Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum.
Judy Garland ended up playing the role of seventeen-year-old Esther Smith in the MGM music Meet Me In St. Louis, a role she originally didn't want because she feared it would sey her career back instead of forward.
by Piper Leigh Hathaway January 02, 2005
To lift one’s leg in the air, like a cat, and reveal one’s butthole. Often done spontaneously and to surprise others. Requires flexibility to lift one’s leg nearly vertically. See film Cats (2019) for reference.
Girl to friend: Can you believe Britney?! She just Judi-Denched herself and then kissed her boyfriend. Iconic.
Chad: Bro, I met this girl on Tinder that wants to watch me Dench. Should I go for it?
Trent: Yeah bro, I’ve been Judi-Denching for my girl since spring break.
Chad: Bro, I met this girl on Tinder that wants to watch me Dench. Should I go for it?
Trent: Yeah bro, I’ve been Judi-Denching for my girl since spring break.
by Prudence19 December 31, 2020
by Jyles November 12, 2003
That strange feeling when you see or hear something obscure that you had just been talking or thinking about. It's like deja vu but so strange and out there it feels borderline scary.
by abbieash December 01, 2021
To bite, chew on, or erode with teeth, with particular vehemence.
Pronounced: jew-dee naw
Alternate spellings: judy gnaw.
Pronounced: jew-dee naw
Alternate spellings: judy gnaw.
by orangeumbrella June 01, 2009
This is rhyming slang.
Dame Judi Dench = stench.
It naturally is no reflection on the actress or her thespian abilities. The joy of the phrase is the total irrelevance of the subject to the meaning.
It is quoted several times in Irvine Welsh's novels; some readers have misunderstood what it means when used in phrases liked "He left a Dame Judi Dench in the toilet" - the text would refer to the odour, not the stool.
Dame Judi Dench = stench.
It naturally is no reflection on the actress or her thespian abilities. The joy of the phrase is the total irrelevance of the subject to the meaning.
It is quoted several times in Irvine Welsh's novels; some readers have misunderstood what it means when used in phrases liked "He left a Dame Judi Dench in the toilet" - the text would refer to the odour, not the stool.
by Edna Sweetlove August 03, 2010
by Summer Morrison March 29, 2016