A dingleberry of the beard. Derived from the word chin and dingleberry. Usually the result from performing rather immoral activities.
When Kevin saw Ed enter the room he exclaimed, "Dude, whose ass have you been eating! That is one mean chingleberry you have there."
by BillyBarou February 29, 2008
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"of course, man."
" i spread open my ass in the mirror to see if i needed to wipe any more, and i have a hairy asshole."
"oh! so you're a bung chungler! same here man! dont worry about it, pretty much every man has one."
"of course, man."
" i spread open my ass in the mirror to see if i needed to wipe any more, and i have a hairy asshole."
"oh! so you're a bung chungler! same here man! dont worry about it, pretty much every man has one."
by dangleberries June 4, 2009
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chingler
• chinger
• chingle
• Chiggler
• chinglet
• chingleberry
• chongler
• changlers
• Chingering
• chingger
A chinger is a telephone fraud device that mimics the frequency made by a pay telephone when money was dropped into it. Putting money in the coin slot caused a DTMF or Dual Tone Multi Frequency signal to be sent out to the central switching box which registered it and when enough money had been inserted into the phone would connect the call. The chinger could mimic that sound and thus produce the equivalent effect of dropping a quarter into the pay phone.
So basically, a chinger allowed the user to make unlimited free calls from certain pay phones. They could be made using a simple pocket electronic address book sold at Radio Shack, and replacing the chip inside to alter the output sound.
They were also known as "red boxes" but the name chinger probably referred to the chiming sound it made when mimicing a quarter drop.
Most modern pay phones no longer use the DTMF tones, rendering the chinger obsolete... but it was fun while it lasted!
So basically, a chinger allowed the user to make unlimited free calls from certain pay phones. They could be made using a simple pocket electronic address book sold at Radio Shack, and replacing the chip inside to alter the output sound.
They were also known as "red boxes" but the name chinger probably referred to the chiming sound it made when mimicing a quarter drop.
Most modern pay phones no longer use the DTMF tones, rendering the chinger obsolete... but it was fun while it lasted!
by Jacaranda February 1, 2008
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