by da trick biatch May 9, 2006

This shirt is a particular piece of clothing worn by Benedict Cumberbatch's adaptation of Sherlock Holmes. The shirt is a piece that looks particularly good on him, leading many of the fandom to believe it's his "pulling" shirt - ergo; when he wears it when he wants/ is likely to get sex (usually from/ with his friend John Watson).
by S. Moffat January 12, 2012

Created by Kim Taehyung of BTS, "I purple you" holds a deep and special meaning to the fandom. It is much more than "I love you" as purple is the last color of the rainbow and means "I will trust, love, and support you for a very long time."
IMPORTANT! "I purple you" loses its meaning and becomes "I hate you" when it's not said by ARMYs to BTS and the reverse. The reason behind it is that other artists/groups will feel like their fans are bringing up someone else in their interactions, immediately making them feel bad. Thus, it's good to avoid using it.
IMPORTANT! "I purple you" loses its meaning and becomes "I hate you" when it's not said by ARMYs to BTS and the reverse. The reason behind it is that other artists/groups will feel like their fans are bringing up someone else in their interactions, immediately making them feel bad. Thus, it's good to avoid using it.
BTS: "We'll see each other again, ARMY! We purple you!"
ARMY: "We purple you, too!"
Fan: "I purple you!"
Not-BTS: "What does that mean... Ugh, come on, why would you use a BTS phrase? Just say you support and love me."
ARMY: "We purple you, too!"
Fan: "I purple you!"
Not-BTS: "What does that mean... Ugh, come on, why would you use a BTS phrase? Just say you support and love me."
by tequilahobi November 2, 2019

An alien gang in GTA online drives vans and whacks people with baseball bats. Main rival to the green alien gang.
by Big-digger-nick April 30, 2020

by Purplenurple December 4, 2013

Touchstone phrase for situation when one person in a group suddenly notices something that the group has been focused on all along.
Origin: During a long street discussion of a massive fire in downtown Boston in the 1960s, another bystander suddenly said "Hey, look at that purple smoke!"
The group broke up laughing and repeating "purple smoke!". As isolated as the incident may have seemed, I have encountered the same phrase and meaning more than once years later as far away as California.
The group broke up laughing and repeating "purple smoke!". As isolated as the incident may have seemed, I have encountered the same phrase and meaning more than once years later as far away as California.
by skribanr July 7, 2010

by Funnnnnnnnyyyyyyyyy perrron May 4, 2021
