An emoticon depicting:
- "Here I am!"
- "Surprise!"
- Someone wanting a hug.
It can also be used in a humorous/wise ass sense as shown in the example.
- "Here I am!"
- "Surprise!"
- Someone wanting a hug.
It can also be used in a humorous/wise ass sense as shown in the example.
Person 1: I was going fast on the road, then I slammed the brakes and made a skid mark.
Person 2: Where? In your underwear? <(:D)>
Person 2: Where? In your underwear? <(:D)>
by Jon Ace May 07, 2007
a term of endearment used for either:
an extremely well endowed female.
an extremely well endowed male. (An 'effin huge penis.)
rocket ships and pirates.
an extremely well endowed female.
an extremely well endowed male. (An 'effin huge penis.)
rocket ships and pirates.
by cookie woodland May 12, 2006
by D. Bailey November 06, 2006
by CocoCullen January 11, 2009
Dashawn: Hey, whats up with that girl from the other night?
Darian: She had a fat ass but she was crazy so I hit her with the D&D!
Darian: She had a fat ass but she was crazy so I hit her with the D&D!
by Stralock May 24, 2019
A designation for a letter drive on a computer, as in a hard drive, hard drive partition, CD-ROM drive, etc.
Generally, because A: is reserved for a 3 1/2 inch floppy drive, B: for the obsolete 5 1/4 floppy drive (the letter is skipped if the drive does not exist), and C: for the first hard drive, D: is most often a second hard drive or a first CD-ROM drive.
Letters thereafter, such as E:, F:, G:, etc. can be filled by CD-ROM drives, burners, external hard drives, USB drives, and the like as necessary. While not required to be in alphabetical order, it is this way by default.
Generally, because A: is reserved for a 3 1/2 inch floppy drive, B: for the obsolete 5 1/4 floppy drive (the letter is skipped if the drive does not exist), and C: for the first hard drive, D: is most often a second hard drive or a first CD-ROM drive.
Letters thereafter, such as E:, F:, G:, etc. can be filled by CD-ROM drives, burners, external hard drives, USB drives, and the like as necessary. While not required to be in alphabetical order, it is this way by default.
by Kenthar August 31, 2005