1. Someone so irredeemably idiotic that it is safe to assume that they derive pleasure from slashing cocks... possibly with a blade of some sort, we just don't know.
2. A general term for an annoying or stupid person.
3. A generic insult, can easily deployed as it rolls off the tongue like water off a Goretex duck.
(Commonly accredited to the legendary Bruce)
2. A general term for an annoying or stupid person.
3. A generic insult, can easily deployed as it rolls off the tongue like water off a Goretex duck.
(Commonly accredited to the legendary Bruce)
'What a cock slasher, he just spat on my patio'
'You cretinous cock slasher, since when have you had the glands to stand up to me'
'AAAAAAARRRRRGHHHHHH!!!! You COCK slasher, right on the tip!'
'You cretinous cock slasher, since when have you had the glands to stand up to me'
'AAAAAAARRRRRGHHHHHH!!!! You COCK slasher, right on the tip!'
by Elbow Redwood May 8, 2006
Get the Cock slasher mug.by PoorTom February 5, 2017
Get the wide slash mug.A donkey slash is when a male person whacks his reproductive organ over any part of a female. While the penis is covered in his own semen.
by Gman0371 April 15, 2017
Get the Donkey slash mug.by Hola-ole May 19, 2017
Get the emergency slash mug./
by The Ginger Bread Woman September 13, 2017
Get the foward slash mug.Finding an empty urinal, pulling your pants down to your ankles and half-squatting whilst shuffling side-to-side with your hands making a crab-like motion above your head.
Wow, look at this empty urinal. Check this crab-slash bro.
Hey! Did you see Tom’s crab-slash? That guy went full Zoidberg.
Hey! Did you see Tom’s crab-slash? That guy went full Zoidberg.
by Donjohnsonswhitelambo May 30, 2018
Get the Crab-Slash mug.* It possibly arose as a version of the ligature, Œ, of the digraph"Oe ", with the horizontal line of the "e" written across the "o".
* It possibly arose in Anglo-Saxon England as an O and an I written in the same place: compare Bede's Northumbria in Anglo-Saxon period spelling ''Coinualch'' for standard ''Cēnwealh'' (a man's name) (in a text in Latin). Later the letter ø disappeared from Anglo-Saxon as the Anglo-Saxon sound /ø/ changed to /e/, but by then use of the letter ø had spread from England to Scandinavia
* It possibly arose in Anglo-Saxon England as an O and an I written in the same place: compare Bede's Northumbria in Anglo-Saxon period spelling ''Coinualch'' for standard ''Cēnwealh'' (a man's name) (in a text in Latin). Later the letter ø disappeared from Anglo-Saxon as the Anglo-Saxon sound /ø/ changed to /e/, but by then use of the letter ø had spread from England to Scandinavia
by Qorptocx November 2, 2018
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