Contrary to other beliefs, Square Head is not a reference to the WWII helmets that the Germans used. It is used in reference to the common shape in which many Germans heads are shaped. Dominating brow bones and a square jaw are what create this square look.
by Brandeis September 17, 2006
 Get the square headmug.
Get the square headmug. Exclamatory warning indicating that one practice increased alertness to avoid harm from a pressing threat.
by kwashia March 28, 2005
 Get the heads upmug.
Get the heads upmug. "I know this girl named block head,she gotta block head, cause after every block party she gives the whole block head." *this is a part of a song that's popular in atlanta.
by LOLA B. June 7, 2005
 Get the BLOCK HEADmug.
Get the BLOCK HEADmug. "There is a real place called Hoople, in North Dakota, spiritually not too far removed from the real Deadwood in South Dakota, though the two places are at opposite corners of the states. Hoople, however, is a tiny place even today (population about 300) and can hardly have been significant enough in 1876—even if it existed then—to be the source of a deprecatory comment."
"According to Professor Jonathan Lighter’s Historical Dictionary of American Slang, it probably derives from Major Hoople, who was a character in a once-famous cartoon strip entitled Our Boarding House, which featured the goings-on at Martha Hoople’s rooming establishment. It was written and drawn by Gene Ahern and began to appear in September 1921..."
"...It would not have been possible for Al Swearengen (Deadwood) to have used the word in 1876, 40+ years before Gene Ahern invented the character (Major Hoople) and a hundred years before it was first recorded in print. The producer and head of the scriptwriting team (HBO: Deadwood), David Milch, has been reported as saying in essence that he picked something out of the air to serve as a suitable insult without great concern for its etymology. It seems he must have heard it somewhere and it came conveniently back to mind while writing the scripts. It’s definitely an anachronism."
"According to Professor Jonathan Lighter’s Historical Dictionary of American Slang, it probably derives from Major Hoople, who was a character in a once-famous cartoon strip entitled Our Boarding House, which featured the goings-on at Martha Hoople’s rooming establishment. It was written and drawn by Gene Ahern and began to appear in September 1921..."
"...It would not have been possible for Al Swearengen (Deadwood) to have used the word in 1876, 40+ years before Gene Ahern invented the character (Major Hoople) and a hundred years before it was first recorded in print. The producer and head of the scriptwriting team (HBO: Deadwood), David Milch, has been reported as saying in essence that he picked something out of the air to serve as a suitable insult without great concern for its etymology. It seems he must have heard it somewhere and it came conveniently back to mind while writing the scripts. It’s definitely an anachronism."
"Those damn writers on Deadwood don't research their slang words, but that doesn't stop Grandma from calling everyone a 'hoople head' anyways."
by The Chanel September 16, 2008
 Get the hoople headmug.
Get the hoople headmug. An Onion, in drug culture, is an ounce of cocaine.  Hence, an onion head, is a cocaine addict or one who has a sweet tooth for cocaine.
by Frank Board September 2, 2005
 Get the onion headmug.
Get the onion headmug. by i want food August 29, 2003
 Get the pot headmug.
Get the pot headmug. by lololololol pills September 24, 2010
 Get the suck the headsmug.
Get the suck the headsmug.