Azafit: "The suit that I recently bought is of unsatisfactory standards."
Tailor: "Very very yellow yes?"
Tailor: "Very very yellow yes?"
by Jack Sh*t January 10, 2009

Yellow Dog Democrat why don't you just switch to being conservative republicans you dirty incest-loving hicks.
by AndreaCow December 10, 2006

by analog_anarchy August 31, 2004

by Abc123babyuandme December 26, 2021

by Moonie Money March 27, 2020

Coined by Robert M. Price in "The Case Against The Case For Christ", derived from The Wizard of Oz.
Arguing for the truth of a controversial, often religiously significant claim by presupposing the truth of some other equally controversial claim.
Arguing for the truth of a controversial, often religiously significant claim by presupposing the truth of some other equally controversial claim.
"This is why, if apologists like William Lane Craig can get an opponent as far as admitting that Joseph of Arimathea probably did have Jesus interred in his own tomb, and if the women did probably visit the tomb, and that the tomb was probably found to be empty, he can press on to the conclusion that Bingo! Jesus must have risen from the dead! What they somehow do not see is that to argue thus is like arguing that the Emerald City of Oz must actually exist since, otherwise, where would the Yellow Brick Road lead?" -The Case Against The Case For Christ (p.209)
"The disciples clearly didn't hallucinate Jesus after the crucifixion since he allowed Thomas to poke his wounds and he shared bread with them. Simultaneous hallucinations involving multiple sensory modalities just don't happen."
"Yeah, that's just yellow brick road apologetics."
"The disciples clearly didn't hallucinate Jesus after the crucifixion since he allowed Thomas to poke his wounds and he shared bread with them. Simultaneous hallucinations involving multiple sensory modalities just don't happen."
"Yeah, that's just yellow brick road apologetics."
by justanotherusername May 3, 2021

Another word for a banana.
by RahsaanVoriel January 2, 2021
