The act of visiting the supermarket for "provisions" of the rigor-mortis variety. Useful when it comes to mothers day, for the blood which tends to congeal delicately and superfluously around the anal membrane.
According to maritime law, the crossbow closet must be purged of air before the corpse shopping is begun by Little Moe with the gimpy leg.
According to maritime law, the crossbow closet must be purged of air before the corpse shopping is begun by Little Moe with the gimpy leg.
Corpse shopping shall be done only with a crizal lens wedged between your tear duct and occipital lobe.
by The Phantom Patriot August 02, 2012
Slang for describing a shop/building involved in a money laundering scheme.
Inspired by the show, Breaking Bad.
Inspired by the show, Breaking Bad.
"Aye man, you know that deli our uncle owns down the street? It's a chicken shop."
"Los Pollos Hermanos shut down last week, heard it was a chicken shop"
"Los Pollos Hermanos shut down last week, heard it was a chicken shop"
by NobleKonig May 28, 2024
Slang for describing a shop/building involved in money laundering schemes.
Inspired by the show, Breaking Bad
Inspired by the show, Breaking Bad
by NobleKonig May 28, 2024
What Fortnite fans say when their favorite emote doesn't come out no matter what else there is in the item shop.
by SMACKLEDORFD February 13, 2023
Refers to da steps-saving groceries-trolley-returning practice whereby ya halt a few yards from da cart-corral in da parking lot and then give da cart a speedy push so dat it (hopefully!) rolls da rest of da way into da corral, thus scoring a "goal".
I always love seeing my "aimed and released" shopping-cart roll smoothly between da walls of da corral; shopping-cart hockey is even more satisfying, though, if said cart also clatters itself into place at da end of da line of other carts in da corral.
by QuacksO November 10, 2024
When you ask one person a question and they say no and then you ask another person the same question hoping for them to say yes.
by JemimaJ September 21, 2019
by the parsh January 31, 2003