Hall of Fame, walk of Shame.
When a girl (woman) is leaving the place she had sex at last night (usually with some random guy).
Her hair is all messed up, lipstick very smeared. She is holding her hand towards her back side to ensure her dress stays down, and you can tell she has no undies on usually. The neighbors know the walk and the random dude watchs out the window with a giggles to himself or a roomate, cuz he too knows THAT walk!!
When a girl (woman) is leaving the place she had sex at last night (usually with some random guy).
Her hair is all messed up, lipstick very smeared. She is holding her hand towards her back side to ensure her dress stays down, and you can tell she has no undies on usually. The neighbors know the walk and the random dude watchs out the window with a giggles to himself or a roomate, cuz he too knows THAT walk!!
"Oh my god look out the window at the flavor of the day leaving Craigs house, doing the Hall of Fame, walk of Shame."
by -cM January 17, 2009
"Yeah, after getting caught using the office copier that way, I'm pretty sure you'll be getting your walking papers next week."
by Marty G. November 10, 2007
in othello, desdemona allows for other people to walk all over her.
When you are weak, you are letting someone walk on you and you can't defend yourself
When you are weak, you are letting someone walk on you and you can't defend yourself
by cxsw November 24, 2013
by Baby's hacker April 19, 2017
A term in sports lingo that has gotten completely out of control. Originally coined by Dennis Eckersley in 1993 to describe a home run of such power that you don't even turn around to look ... you just walk off the mound.
The corny fools at ESPN - and their brain dead followers - now use the term to decribe virtually any play that ends the game; walk-off hit, balk, double, single, etc.
"Game-ending" and "Game-winning" have surrendered.
The corny fools at ESPN - and their brain dead followers - now use the term to decribe virtually any play that ends the game; walk-off hit, balk, double, single, etc.
"Game-ending" and "Game-winning" have surrendered.
If we use the term "Walk-Off Home Run" why not ... "The Mets lost in the bottom of the 10th on a walk-off groundout."
by Trendon July 21, 2009
by Lifesaver & Lazarus November 09, 2007
He's so tight, it squeaks when he walks.
by Angel of Mine August 30, 2011