My definition of Jigoku is correct.
by Trigger-happy August 2, 2007
Get the jigoku mug.Hey! Mr. Tambourine Man, play a song for me,
I'm not sleepy and there is no place I'm going to.
Hey! Mr. Tambourine Man, play a song for me,
In the jingle jangle morning I'll come followin' you.
(Bob Dylan: Mr. Tambourine Man)
I'm not sleepy and there is no place I'm going to.
Hey! Mr. Tambourine Man, play a song for me,
In the jingle jangle morning I'll come followin' you.
(Bob Dylan: Mr. Tambourine Man)
by kaiser38fuenf January 19, 2010
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• jingo jangos
• jingoism
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• jingoes
• jingofin
• Jingohistorian
• Jingoist
• jingoistic
by SAHILmaharashtra April 7, 2008
Get the jigolo mug.by Jinge March 10, 2013
Get the Jinge mug."I hate riding with Jake because he always listens to Nigger Jingles! All I hear is 'I repeat Myself! I repeat myself! I repeat myself! to the sound of the track!"
by Morrison House February 16, 2008
Get the Nigger Jingle mug.A horse kept at a campsite overnight, to be ridden in the morning to round up (to jingle) all the other horses who are out grazing.
At a cowboy campsite, most of the horses are allowed to go graze overnight with some degree of freedom, with a little bell attached so they can still be found in the dark by the sound. One horse is kept near the camp so it can be ridden to round up the others in the morning.
Traditionally, the horses were supposed to be fed before anyone else could eat breakfast, so someone would be tasked to go "jingle" the horses in the early hours of the morning, since the little bells would jingle whenever they moved.
Source: Equus Magazine, "The Language of Horses" Nov 2014
The phrase also appears in the original lyrics for the Christmas song, Jingle Bell Rock.
At a cowboy campsite, most of the horses are allowed to go graze overnight with some degree of freedom, with a little bell attached so they can still be found in the dark by the sound. One horse is kept near the camp so it can be ridden to round up the others in the morning.
Traditionally, the horses were supposed to be fed before anyone else could eat breakfast, so someone would be tasked to go "jingle" the horses in the early hours of the morning, since the little bells would jingle whenever they moved.
Source: Equus Magazine, "The Language of Horses" Nov 2014
The phrase also appears in the original lyrics for the Christmas song, Jingle Bell Rock.
Steve, saddle up on the jingle horse and go jingle the other horses so they can be fed before any of us can eat.
by hinglejorse December 16, 2017
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