"Wow, that guy over there took his tanning way too seriously! His tan lines make him look like a panda! He's a tan line panda!"
by Urbanus the Dictator August 16, 2020
Get the Tan line pandamug. When you're so used to taking it up the ass from your oppressors involuntarily any suggestion that they might not be good for you or for society at large makes you start screeching and looking for a jackboot to lick.
by Wypipo whisperer September 8, 2020
Get the Blue Line Butthurtmug. The act of fucking a girl in the ass and fingering her at the same time, and feeling your dick through the Perineum with your finger.
by jagrmeister680 May 10, 2018
Get the Thin Pink Linemug. A person who’s “friends” talk to them if they want to skip the lunch line (or when they otherwise need something) but is ignored otherwise
by anonymous February 23, 2022
Get the Lunch Line Friendmug. by Robb2020 June 7, 2020
Get the Rob brown linemug. A method to differentiate a dash placed at the end of a line to indicate that a word has been separated into two parts because it did not fit on a line, from a hyphen inserted between two or more words, such as "hands-on", "brother-in-law", or "state-of-the-art".
It is best to differentiate a dash placed at the end of a line to indicate that a word has been separated into two parts because it did not fit on a line, from a hyphen in a compound word such as "hands-on".
A "compound word" is comprised of two or more words and has a hyphen between each word.
If a line ends in "able-" and the next line says "bodied", readers automatically interpret "able", followed by "body", to mean "ablebodied". Most people do not remember that the correct way to write "ablebodied" is with a hyphen (able-bodied). I call this method to differentiate dashes from hyphens the "next line hyphen".
If the last word on a line of text says "for-", and the first word of the next line says "profit", the logical way to interpret the dash is as being a dash, though in reality, the writer means “for-profit”, not “forprofit”.
A "compound word" is comprised of two or more words and has a hyphen between each word.
If a line ends in "able-" and the next line says "bodied", readers automatically interpret "able", followed by "body", to mean "ablebodied". Most people do not remember that the correct way to write "ablebodied" is with a hyphen (able-bodied). I call this method to differentiate dashes from hyphens the "next line hyphen".
If the last word on a line of text says "for-", and the first word of the next line says "profit", the logical way to interpret the dash is as being a dash, though in reality, the writer means “for-profit”, not “forprofit”.
by but for February 26, 2018
Get the next line hyphenmug. Similar to crack head energy, gives you an uneasy feeling as if you had encountered them on the last train downtown
by Alternate name December 20, 2019
Get the blue line energymug.