When a girl leaves a personal item at the significant others apartment after a one night stand or at the beginning of a relationship.
Guy: This chick hooked up with last night left her necklace and panties at my place
Guy 2: Dam Bro you got cat sprayed
Guy 2: Dam Bro you got cat sprayed
by Jaimegirl007 November 25, 2016

a cat wearing a blue onesie playing a tune on the piano. it usually comes after a video of somebody or thing failing, or epic failing
by cherypi May 22, 2010

by granmaster rousch January 9, 2004

by Ass Machine Teapot March 30, 2005

This phrase is a descriptive term used to accentuate the coolness or craziness factor of a person, place or thing.
Killer alternative to the "Cat's meow".
Killer alternative to the "Cat's meow".
by phenomena April 30, 2006

Bill the Cat is a local hobo in Iowa City, Iowa, and the main inspiration for the character (of the same name) in the cult comic, Bloom County, which Berkley Brethead drew.
Berkley lived on Bloomington street in the early 1980's, and thus, being from Iowa City, knew of the famous Bill the Cat.
Bill the Cat is a man in his '50s (or older, by now), who is about 6' 5", and once burst into a laundromat, screaming "I got's me some new shoes!", being promptley chased from the premises by the owner, a women of five feet, armed with a broom, screaming "I thought I told you to never come back here!".
Berkley lived on Bloomington street in the early 1980's, and thus, being from Iowa City, knew of the famous Bill the Cat.
Bill the Cat is a man in his '50s (or older, by now), who is about 6' 5", and once burst into a laundromat, screaming "I got's me some new shoes!", being promptley chased from the premises by the owner, a women of five feet, armed with a broom, screaming "I thought I told you to never come back here!".
*My dad saw Bill the Cat breaking into a car back in '99.
*Dude, it's bill the cat!! What's up, bro-ha?
*How'd Bill get the name "Bill the Cat"?
*Dude, it's bill the cat!! What's up, bro-ha?
*How'd Bill get the name "Bill the Cat"?
by B_nizzly July 7, 2008

Term used by people of the Southern persuasion to identify something moving at a pace that borders on the supernatural. First seen in the 1920's when a group of men rubbed a cat's cinnamon ring with a dried out corncob until it was raw, and then wiped it with a rag soaked in turpentine. Can be used interchangeably with raped ape
by bob44 February 9, 2005
