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Hucker

One who throws himself/herself wildly through the air and does not land on his/her feet.
Holy shit that kid Fred is a damn hucker! He got like 10 feet of air but then landed on his spleen and totaled his wrist!
by Fred Murphy May 13, 2005
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Boom Boom Huck jam

A puzzling combination of words that Tony Hawk's publicists have employed to manufacture interest.
by Peter B. Wonderful September 8, 2005
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Related Words

Huckabj

When you throw up a little bit while giving a blow job. It is a play on the name of the anti-gay politician Mike Huckabee, popularized by sex columnist Dan Savage during his 2011 talk at Cornell University
The bj I gave last night turned into a huckabj when I started to deep throat him.
by deepest throat April 30, 2011
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beef hucker

(n):One who hucks dead animals at mormon's.
Jimmy was a beef hucker because he threw some road meat at some mormon mother fucker.
by over beasles August 10, 2003
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Huckalious

the utmost awesomeneess,the last level of awesomeness,greatest thing in the universe
This food is huckalious.
That guy is huckalious
by Lucas Huckeby May 4, 2008
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inverted hucklebuck

the sexual position where oral sex is given and recieved by both partners simultaneously. AKA the 69
That bitch is lookin' so fine I might have to go scoop her up and throw the inverted hucklebuck on her.
by Chester NoSeeds January 24, 2006
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huckle bearer

Huckle bearer is a nonexistent word that is claimed to have been used in the South to mean the same as 'pallbearer' during the 1800s. This is based on the claim that the term huckle referred to a coffin handle. This term was made up out of whole cloth by a 'historian' engaged in blatant speculation after the release of the movie Tombstone, where Doc Holliday, played by Val Kilmer, utters the famous line "I'm your huckleberry." The claim is that the real Doc Holliday said 'I'm your hucklebearer." Some also claim that this is the correct line from the movie. It is all complete nonsense. There is no evidence that this term ever existed.

"I'm your huckleberry" is a well-attested English idiom that was used during the 1800s and is still used in some parts of the South today. It probably does not come from Mark Twain's character Huckleberry Finn since it seems to have existed before the novel was published. It means "I'm your man" or "I'm the man for the job."
"Some people say that pallbearers were once called huckle bearers."
by Essential English April 21, 2022
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