A: Shut the hell up!
B: What?
A: Shut it up, quick! Before it sucks us into the void that it is!
B: Oh, you meant that gaping portal to hell in my bathroom. Yeah, uh......that's a toilet.
B: What?
A: Shut it up, quick! Before it sucks us into the void that it is!
B: Oh, you meant that gaping portal to hell in my bathroom. Yeah, uh......that's a toilet.
by I live in Passaic June 30, 2005
Get the shut the hell up mug.Another name for Taco bell.
Eat this and stay backed up for days Or get wet watery runs.
Cation: Hot itchy but.
Eat this and stay backed up for days Or get wet watery runs.
Cation: Hot itchy but.
by Reanight July 9, 2009
Get the Taco hell mug.Related Words
Hell
• hello
• hella
• HEllO KittY
• hello there
• Hell Hole
• heller
• Hellen Keller
• helly
• hella gay
by Ridio93 March 22, 2008
Get the Frickin Hell mug.A phrase expressing disdain, intense disapproval, or frustration with something that you can yell in front of little kids or at work when you've got to keep things PG.
You're driving on the freeway and already late for work when traffic suddenly stops.
You: "Fricken' Hell!"
You: "Fricken' Hell!"
by Dailydan January 1, 2009
Get the Fricken' Hell mug.by Soviet Russia February 12, 2017
Get the Oh hell no mug.The mega worldwide tour of 50 cities in 30 days left me so worn out that I felt like I had been to hell and back.
by PlaceHolder June 16, 2004
Get the been to hell and back mug.This is where "hell to pay" originated from. In the days of wooden ships the timber that kept them afloat were covered in pitch or tar. The tar was applied to the bottom of the ship, or "hell" as it was called, and the process was called "paying". But before any of this was done strips of rope, wound fiber or hemp were pounded between the planks. These strips were called the "devil".
To sum it all up "paying the devil in hell" refers to pounding strips of fiber between planks and then coating them in tar. The term "hell to pay" refers to the constant maintenance of applying tar to keep the ship watertight. A job which no sailor wanted considering that "hell" was the darkest, dankest, disease ridden part of a sailing ship.
To sum it all up "paying the devil in hell" refers to pounding strips of fiber between planks and then coating them in tar. The term "hell to pay" refers to the constant maintenance of applying tar to keep the ship watertight. A job which no sailor wanted considering that "hell" was the darkest, dankest, disease ridden part of a sailing ship.
by Burt Trimlicker May 31, 2009
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