by Timmytony April 12, 2022
Thats why your a Mook Boi
by Mook Boi 69 May 15, 2018
When you perform the act of smoking weed and tobacco at the same time.
*Can also be accomplished by means of vaping*
*Can also be accomplished by means of vaping*
by conkum April 19, 2019
Elijah Mook is a really ugly person who tries to be funny but really isn't. You should never friend an Elijah mook
by Elijah mook April 30, 2020
A real cool dude, who always chilling, minds his business and keeps away from The bullshit, it's safe to say that big mook is the best person you'll ever meet.
by Sue falls March 14, 2017
A person who's a member of the Red Sock nation for the sole reason of wanting to be in the Red Sock nation. He doesn't know the difference between a fastball and a curveball but will argue to the death that the Red Socks are the best team ever.
Fuckin Mook: Big Papi is the greatest player in the universe!!!
Normal Person: The man can't even play first base. And he gets winded after running 30 feet.
Fuckin Mook: Fuck you. Cowboy up! Bloody Sock!!
Normal Person: Bucky Dent.
Fuckin Mook: Who?
Normal Person (shaking his head): What a fuckin mook.
Normal Person: The man can't even play first base. And he gets winded after running 30 feet.
Fuckin Mook: Fuck you. Cowboy up! Bloody Sock!!
Normal Person: Bucky Dent.
Fuckin Mook: Who?
Normal Person (shaking his head): What a fuckin mook.
by njyankee1 March 16, 2009
Seems to have been taken from Caribbean English, in which it is (was) used to refer to a gullible person. The word has since undergone several changes in meaning, so that it now depends on which sense of the word the speaker has been exposed to. It was popularized in Scorsese's "Mean Streets" (1972), but when Johnny calls Jimmy a mook, it causes confusion: "Nobody knows what a mook is" even appears in the script.
mook (n.)
"This type of student, rigorously following a daily assignment schedule and graphing his grades on the wall, is a never common but somewhat frequent phenomenon. The ‘grind’, ‘mook’, or ‘weenie’ superficially seems to satisfy the demands of Yale, but in many ways he is not alive to the spirit of the place."
--Yale Alumni Magazine, Jan. 21, 1958
"Call them knuckleheads or young white guys; Spin magazine lambasted them with the term ‘mooks’, a label that has since been picked up as a badge of honor."
--NY Times Magazine, Aug. 6, 2000: 39/2
"This type of student, rigorously following a daily assignment schedule and graphing his grades on the wall, is a never common but somewhat frequent phenomenon. The ‘grind’, ‘mook’, or ‘weenie’ superficially seems to satisfy the demands of Yale, but in many ways he is not alive to the spirit of the place."
--Yale Alumni Magazine, Jan. 21, 1958
"Call them knuckleheads or young white guys; Spin magazine lambasted them with the term ‘mooks’, a label that has since been picked up as a badge of honor."
--NY Times Magazine, Aug. 6, 2000: 39/2
by D.R.M. December 05, 2006