Fruity bottled alcoholic drinks made to look like they are for men.
i.e. Mikes Hard Lemonade, Parrot Bay, Smirnoff Ice, Reds Apple Ale, etc.
wine
wine cooler
alcohol
beer
booze
drunk
drink
drinking
i.e. Mikes Hard Lemonade, Parrot Bay, Smirnoff Ice, Reds Apple Ale, etc.
wine
wine cooler
alcohol
beer
booze
drunk
drink
drinking
by DSeanK August 12, 2016
Get the Man Cooler mug.by Angry Cosack February 23, 2011
Get the Puerto Rican Cooler mug.Related Words
coolier
• coolierod
• coolie
• cooler
• coolies
• Collier
• cooliest
• coolerchrlz
• cookierun_mesopotamia
• coolerest
by Mentjm June 10, 2016
Get the Flapping your soup coolers mug.person 1: hey have you heard of cookierun_mesopotamia?
person 2: yes im mutuals with them they r cool
person 2: yes im mutuals with them they r cool
by orange dehydrated piss February 20, 2022
Get the cookierun_mesopotamia mug.When a 4-man bobsled team is in the middle of a run and one of the members of the team farts, trapping the odor in the sled until the end of the run.
The Jamaicans did not qualify for the finals because one of them created a dutch cooler in their last attempt.
by ernaygr September 13, 2006
Get the dutch cooler mug.Coolie can be traced back to the Hindi kûlî, qulî, meaning, "hired laborer.”literally means "bitterly hard (use of) strength". The word "coolie" is also used commonly in the Hindi language to refer to porters…In Trinidad and Tobago, Guyana and other parts of the Caribbean… the word was commonly used to denote any person of Indian origin or descent. Nowadays, it is often considered an offensive racial slur on par with "nigger.” Its use by non-Indians is usually seen as extremely offensive, but it may be used by people of Indian descent in a neutral or positive way.
Therefore, I'd like to introduce an alternative term. Indo-Caribbeans. First, in defining “Indo-Caribbean-ness” one must consider what this term means in the context of the Caribbean, verses here in Canada. Moreover, it is important to address Indo-Caribbeans by not only their race, culture, and ethnicity but also in terms of social, political, and economic contributions, which they had made in the countries they reside in.
The definition of “Indo-Caribbean-ness” must also avoid making ethnic and racial distinctions by fragmenting the term “Indian-ness” and “Caribbean-ness” as different, when in fact it, through the process of Creolization, there is a fusion between the two. The word Indo-Caribbean is moreover, an academic term used to establish difference, and as result is not widely used by those in the Caribbean—Indians verses Indo-Caribbeans. Hence, the term appears more frequently in communities like Toronto, where it not only represents difference, but also unifies group members in establishments like the Indo-Caribbean World and Ontario Society Serving Indo-Caribbean Canadians (OSSIC). Notably, the term continues to pronunciate through use in Canada, acting to differentiate “us” from the “other,” where Indo-Caribbeans are distinctly not Black-Caribbeans, nor are they East-Indians, Pakistanis, or any other group, which they are easily misidentified as, and therefore put into isolated categories or “same-ness.”
Therefore, I'd like to introduce an alternative term. Indo-Caribbeans. First, in defining “Indo-Caribbean-ness” one must consider what this term means in the context of the Caribbean, verses here in Canada. Moreover, it is important to address Indo-Caribbeans by not only their race, culture, and ethnicity but also in terms of social, political, and economic contributions, which they had made in the countries they reside in.
The definition of “Indo-Caribbean-ness” must also avoid making ethnic and racial distinctions by fragmenting the term “Indian-ness” and “Caribbean-ness” as different, when in fact it, through the process of Creolization, there is a fusion between the two. The word Indo-Caribbean is moreover, an academic term used to establish difference, and as result is not widely used by those in the Caribbean—Indians verses Indo-Caribbeans. Hence, the term appears more frequently in communities like Toronto, where it not only represents difference, but also unifies group members in establishments like the Indo-Caribbean World and Ontario Society Serving Indo-Caribbean Canadians (OSSIC). Notably, the term continues to pronunciate through use in Canada, acting to differentiate “us” from the “other,” where Indo-Caribbeans are distinctly not Black-Caribbeans, nor are they East-Indians, Pakistanis, or any other group, which they are easily misidentified as, and therefore put into isolated categories or “same-ness.”
by alternativethought December 9, 2008
Get the coolie mug.Someone who won't let you talk about a TV show around the water cooler at work, because they have it recorded.
"Hey did you guys see the Office last night?"
"Shh! don't say anything...I have it on my DVR."
"What a cooler killer!"
"Shh! don't say anything...I have it on my DVR."
"What a cooler killer!"
by ccmarv January 22, 2009
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