I say it's the reason I'm buying a PS5. The real reason is I'm a PC gamer who is finally capitulating to play exclusives, quicker to just say "bugsnax!"
Everyone else: Yes, but why are you getting a PS5 instead of NVidea RTX 30 series? Explain yourself with reasons.
Me: Kinda bug and kinda snack! Try to catch 'em in your trap! Feed somebody and you'll see! We are whatever we eat! It's bugsnax oooOOOOooooh!
Me: Kinda bug and kinda snack! Try to catch 'em in your trap! Feed somebody and you'll see! We are whatever we eat! It's bugsnax oooOOOOooooh!
by SalamiArmy September 9, 2020
Get the bugsnax mug.one of the greatest American creations ever. Bugs has opinions and always makes fun of people. His most famous line is Eh... What up Doc? Bugs has an NYC accent, which makes the way he talks funnier
Eh... What Up Doc?
I knew I shoulda taken that left toin at Albukoikee.
Of course you realize, this means war!
Ain't I a stinker!
What a maroon!
(all Bugs Bunny catch phrases)
I knew I shoulda taken that left toin at Albukoikee.
Of course you realize, this means war!
Ain't I a stinker!
What a maroon!
(all Bugs Bunny catch phrases)
by xtremlylucky January 7, 2011
Get the bugs bunny mug.Related Words
U.B.Gs • B.U.G.S. • bugs bunny • Bugsy • bugsbunibi • bugsexual • bugsaster • Bugs Bunnied • Bugs Bunnying • Bugsforgnf._
by Professor Dick Down March 31, 2017
Get the feeler bugs mug.A method in which toom drackets are stretched to their upmost primal form, then biglighted to reduce the bungle drips. This method is commonly used to convert confabulatory toom drackets to sentence mix drivers.
"Oh boy! I can't wait to reduce bungle drips on the toom drackets using bugsplatting! I love science class!"
by bunguloj December 27, 2020
Get the bugsplatting mug.by Jspringz August 21, 2020
Get the Smoking bed bugs mug.Bugs is deserving of a Companion devoted solely to his exploits. Though he was not the studio’s first major star, he certainly was the character who, in the 1940s, made Warner Brothers the number one studio in short-subject animation, at least in terms of popularity. Bugs regularly won popularity polls throughout the 40s, 50s and 60s.
As discussed in the entry for Creation and Development, the question of who created Bugs is very complex. There are a number of contenders for the title of “Creator” of Bugs, including the directors J. B. “Bugs” Hardaway (after whom the character was named), Charles M. Jones, (Bugs is first identified by name onscreen in a Jones short, 1941’s Elmer’s Pet Rabbit) and Robert Clampett. The author follows the school of the thought that it was director Tex Avery in A Wild Hare (1940) who first put together the elements of design, movement, and characterization to form the rabbit we all know.
In spite of the many classic cartoons starring Bugs, he received very few Oscar nominations, and was eventually awarded only one. The nominated cartoons are A Wild Hare (Avery, 1940), Hiawatha’s Rabbit Hunt (Freleng, 1941), and Knighty Knight Bugs (Freleng, 1958). Only the last of these actually won.
The author recommends Joe Adamson’s Bugs Bunny: Fifty Years and Only One Grey Hare, an in-depth study of the character and his films. The book provides much fascinating information on the character, in far greater detail than is within the scope of this document. (The author does invite the reader to examine relevant entries, such as Cross-dressing.)
As discussed in the entry for Creation and Development, the question of who created Bugs is very complex. There are a number of contenders for the title of “Creator” of Bugs, including the directors J. B. “Bugs” Hardaway (after whom the character was named), Charles M. Jones, (Bugs is first identified by name onscreen in a Jones short, 1941’s Elmer’s Pet Rabbit) and Robert Clampett. The author follows the school of the thought that it was director Tex Avery in A Wild Hare (1940) who first put together the elements of design, movement, and characterization to form the rabbit we all know.
In spite of the many classic cartoons starring Bugs, he received very few Oscar nominations, and was eventually awarded only one. The nominated cartoons are A Wild Hare (Avery, 1940), Hiawatha’s Rabbit Hunt (Freleng, 1941), and Knighty Knight Bugs (Freleng, 1958). Only the last of these actually won.
The author recommends Joe Adamson’s Bugs Bunny: Fifty Years and Only One Grey Hare, an in-depth study of the character and his films. The book provides much fascinating information on the character, in far greater detail than is within the scope of this document. (The author does invite the reader to examine relevant entries, such as Cross-dressing.)
by ih8uplzdie November 4, 2004
Get the Bugs Bunny mug.Confusing your opponent in a verbal back and forth, like the Rabbit Season, Duck Season arguments, just to get the satisfaction of being right.
You: "We were supposed to be there at 7."
Them: "No, it was 8."
You: "7"
Them: "8"
You: "8"
Them: "7. Wait, what? Man, you totally Bugs Bunnied me."
Them: "No, it was 8."
You: "7"
Them: "8"
You: "8"
Them: "7. Wait, what? Man, you totally Bugs Bunnied me."
by farby July 29, 2007
Get the Bugs Bunnied mug.