A part in the song Brianstorm which you don't want shouted in your ear, waking you up at 1am when you've fallen asleep to your Arctic Monkeys playlist.
Alex Turner: And we can't take our eyes off the T-Shirt and tie combination. So, See You Later, Innovator
by TheEvilHeimor August 27, 2020
A seemingly innocent question, yet also a loosely veiled insult, posed to fellow participants after regularly recurring weekly activites.
by Fatkid_13 October 11, 2021
The cheap and dirty snacks flogged onto the bereaved for lunch on the day of a layoff round at a company. These sandwiches are usually dry, save for the tears shed by dismissed employees, and flavourless dreck one chokes down between sobs while thinking of supporting 3 kids and a wife who needs another $500 purse.
They are typically passed out by a smug and rotund PA who thinks that since the executive she cowtows before still needs his shoes shined, that he/she will remain employed.
Fillings include cheese, dry turkey, thinly sliced and mealy tomatoes, and roast beef with crusty edges, limp lettuce, and bitterness.
They are typically passed out by a smug and rotund PA who thinks that since the executive she cowtows before still needs his shoes shined, that he/she will remain employed.
Fillings include cheese, dry turkey, thinly sliced and mealy tomatoes, and roast beef with crusty edges, limp lettuce, and bitterness.
by InterWestRainCallDance April 06, 2006
As an acronym it translates into C.U.N.T. or cunt. Great for inside jokes or snide remarks around the uptight.
by Jordan W June 27, 2006
by dol face December 27, 2007
As in "See you on the other side." spoken to Jason Bourne by Conklin in one of the Berlin flashbacks. Conklin says it to Bourne as Bourne is leaving the car to assassinate Neski and his wife.
by thekorrigan April 04, 2011
Variation; See You Next Thursday.
A way to call someone a cunt. The words "see" and "you" becoming the letters c and u, and the phrase next Thursday (or Tuesday) becoming NT.
A way to call someone a cunt. The words "see" and "you" becoming the letters c and u, and the phrase next Thursday (or Tuesday) becoming NT.
by TehNinja January 17, 2010