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My Heart Will Take Shots

A drinking game first played on the Titanic. One guy and three girls pour shots of cheap vodka (minimum of 3). Everyone takes shots, and after shots are consumed, the guy take a swig from the bottle. Then the guy picks a girl to make out with. Repeat if desired.
Hey ladies, you want to play My Heart Will Take Shots?
by TheTallOne December 7, 2009
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pack a wallop

pack a wallop is to provide a burst of energy, power, or excitement.

Also to pack a punch.
I put a special kind of gasoline in my car because I thought it would pack a wallop. It didn't.
by azarashi October 7, 2015
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Related Words

pussy willows

s.pl. testicles that are small, furry, and/or cute; feline testicles.
gf: oooh! i love your pussy willows!
bf: and there goes my hard-on.
by indalomena November 28, 2006
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I will bury you

I will fucking bury you for that...
by Kung-Fu Jesus April 29, 2004
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wilcox

shotgun; inhaling smoke and blowing it into someone else's mouth
Hey Daniel, can I get a wilcox?
by D.P.S. April 25, 2010
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roger wilco

I agreed with Peniston Booth, 'roger wilco' military use is wrong. It's a tautology i.e. uselessly repetitive. That's also true in any formal radio telephone procedure such as in police RT where they're not used together. In aviation use neither roger nor wilco are even used much as individual words. The full meaning of roger is 'Your last message is received and understood' and it's origin indeed as stated by schizzy is the original phonetic alphabet use of roger for the letter 'R' to 1951now romeo . The full meaning of 'wilco' is 'Your last message is received and understood AND wilL BE coMPLIED WITH'. Therefore wilco already includes roger.

However, this being Urban Dictionary it's the slang/colloquial use being defined so in that setting schizzy's example of the wife/husband is correct whether speaking directly or by phone. It'd also be very acceptable if they were using CB radio I guess. It's slang use can even have slightly sarcastic or facetious overtones at times. However, having an aviation background I reject his example of the pilot and ATC. Redundancy is the lesser sin, no pilot should answer like that. It's required to repeat the instruction back to the controller. The instruction wouldn't be given verbatim as quoted anyway. In aviation, the use of roger to acknowledge information no instructions may be acceptable at times but wilco is rarely used if at all. Mostly where roger could be used it's sufficient to simply answer with the aircraft's call sign.
In a casual 'slang' conversation:

Wife: 'Please pick up the paper off the driveway when you come home tonight'
Husband: Roger wilco. Your wish is my command!
by DropBeaDropBearr March 22, 2017
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we will see

a phrase that blatantly means "no" but is said to avoid giving a concrete answer and maybe to spare the askers feelings
by superheadd February 28, 2011
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