A phrase used to describe something that falls to the ground like a sack of spuds, usually after being struck with some force. completely useless as an actual description but funny all the same.
This terrorost was runnin' aboot oan fire,,so I ran up an gave him a good boot in tha baws and he dropped like a sack of spuds
by Splintergroup May 24, 2010
Get the Sack Of Spuds mug.A bag carryed around by bums and hobos (mostly hobos) they are usually full of random junk that the hobos say are "priceless" or "used by (insert famous persons name here)" the hobo sacks are usually plastic bags
Also it can just be a backpack filled with random junk that is not needed. Dose not have to be carried by a hobo. It can be a broken up backpack carried by a middle class person
Also it can just be a backpack filled with random junk that is not needed. Dose not have to be carried by a hobo. It can be a broken up backpack carried by a middle class person
1. That hobo/bum tryed to sell me some junk from his hobo sack
2. Why did you bring that hobo sack! We are just going camping!!!
3. That is to discusting to be a backpack....oh! DUH its a hobo sack!
2. Why did you bring that hobo sack! We are just going camping!!!
3. That is to discusting to be a backpack....oh! DUH its a hobo sack!
by LAN_Wee October 5, 2005
Get the Hobo Sack mug.by Starve August 30, 2005
Get the poop sack mug.A bag of weed that costs 20$.
A dub sack of weed that weighs 1.8 from a bad supplier and 2.0 from a good supplier. Up in Vermont you can get a dank dubsack. The best bud comes from Vermont.
by mike dogmas July 26, 2006
Get the dub sack mug.by ThatCrookedCat November 20, 2009
Get the Sack chaser mug.A new method off masturbation, generally employed by middle aged men who have got bored of the conventional method.
It simply involves rubbing ones "ball sack" until ejaculation. By acheiving orgasm through merely rubbing ones balls, you can be described as "sacking off" as opposed to the more usual "jacking off".
Clearly can be used in many tenses, and as a verb, noun and adjective;
I, he, she is going to sack off tonight.
I, he, she sacked off last night.
I, he, she had a really good sack off last night.
I, he, she is a total sacker offer.
It simply involves rubbing ones "ball sack" until ejaculation. By acheiving orgasm through merely rubbing ones balls, you can be described as "sacking off" as opposed to the more usual "jacking off".
Clearly can be used in many tenses, and as a verb, noun and adjective;
I, he, she is going to sack off tonight.
I, he, she sacked off last night.
I, he, she had a really good sack off last night.
I, he, she is a total sacker offer.
"I'm going to go home, open a bud, put on MTV2 and have a good sack off to the Pussycat Dolls video".
"Stop talking shit, you sacker off"
"You're a real sack off"
"Last night was amazing, my girlfriend came round for the annual blowjob and steak day (March 20th - google it!!), but she surprised me at dinner by sticking her hands down my pants and giving me the most amazing sacking off"
"Stop talking shit, you sacker off"
"You're a real sack off"
"Last night was amazing, my girlfriend came round for the annual blowjob and steak day (March 20th - google it!!), but she surprised me at dinner by sticking her hands down my pants and giving me the most amazing sacking off"
by The Sacker Offer July 16, 2008
Get the Sack off mug.Martin Sacks born 16th October 1959, Sydney) is a well-known Australian actor, chiefly known for his 11-year role on Blue Heelers from 1994 to 2005.
Sacks first got into acting after a bit part in an episode of The Love Boat when it was filming in the Pacific. His first role came about in the series The Restless Years in the late 1970s, which started him on the television circuit in Australia. He emigrated to Hollywood in the 1980s, guest starring in series such as thirtysomething, but preferred Australia, and so he returned there after a few years. Also had guest appearances in;Love in Limbo, Encounters, Irresistible Force, Fields of Fire III, All the Way, Touch the Sun: Princess Kate, Slate, Wyn & Me, Tricheuse, La, Emoh Ruo, Stock Squad and The City's Edge.
Against his first instinct, Sacks took the role of Detective P.J. Hasham in the 1994 series Blue Heelers. The show rocketed him to fame, most notably his 7-year "will-they-or-won't-they" relationship with Constable Maggie Doyle (Lisa McCune) which ended with her death in a seventh-season episode.
During the time he starred on the show, Sacks married Kate and had two children, Jack and Ned and had leading roles in two major Australian miniseries: Do or Die and My Husband My Killer (both 2001).
After playing P.J. for eleven years, and being one of only three original cast still on the show in the twelfth season, Sacks left Blue Heelers to spend time with his growing family. His last episode aired on August 10, 2005. Sacks expressly asked the producers not to kill his character, so that he could return for a guest spot in the future. He did not get the chance, however: the show was cancelled in early 2006.
Sacks is also a director, having directed episodes of Blue Heelers, and a short film called Crushed.
Sacks first got into acting after a bit part in an episode of The Love Boat when it was filming in the Pacific. His first role came about in the series The Restless Years in the late 1970s, which started him on the television circuit in Australia. He emigrated to Hollywood in the 1980s, guest starring in series such as thirtysomething, but preferred Australia, and so he returned there after a few years. Also had guest appearances in;Love in Limbo, Encounters, Irresistible Force, Fields of Fire III, All the Way, Touch the Sun: Princess Kate, Slate, Wyn & Me, Tricheuse, La, Emoh Ruo, Stock Squad and The City's Edge.
Against his first instinct, Sacks took the role of Detective P.J. Hasham in the 1994 series Blue Heelers. The show rocketed him to fame, most notably his 7-year "will-they-or-won't-they" relationship with Constable Maggie Doyle (Lisa McCune) which ended with her death in a seventh-season episode.
During the time he starred on the show, Sacks married Kate and had two children, Jack and Ned and had leading roles in two major Australian miniseries: Do or Die and My Husband My Killer (both 2001).
After playing P.J. for eleven years, and being one of only three original cast still on the show in the twelfth season, Sacks left Blue Heelers to spend time with his growing family. His last episode aired on August 10, 2005. Sacks expressly asked the producers not to kill his character, so that he could return for a guest spot in the future. He did not get the chance, however: the show was cancelled in early 2006.
Sacks is also a director, having directed episodes of Blue Heelers, and a short film called Crushed.
by P. redeckis June 11, 2006
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