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kimchi rage

A mental state typically exhibited by a Korean who is extremely displeased. This condition is signified by gratuitous violence accompanied by psychotic shrieking. Surrounding people and/or objects are usually left injured or damaged. Implied in the term is that such behavior results from ingesting too much kimchi.
"Dude, I can't believe you cheated on your Korean girlfriend. You must not know about kimchi rage."

"What's kimchi rage? ...Holy shit, is that my car on fire?!"
by enGinEEringpinK March 23, 2011
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Kimchi

N. A healthy, good tasting traditional korean dish made with various herbal ingredients. May seem and smell offensive to foreigners. often insulted by prejudiced Japanese people for its strong smell. (Noticable insulting definitions made by Japanese people on this very website, which are false.)
no secondary definitions other than its noun form. (LIKE 'CURRY', OR 'BURITO')
That Korean restaurant serves some very good tasting kimchi!
by CradleEmperor[L] July 25, 2008
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Related Words

In Deep Kimchi

Slang for "In deep trouble" or "In deep shit."
In Korea, people would bury cabbage deep underground in a pot and put a lid over it. They'd keep the cabbage burried until it fermented and turned into Kimchi. When they un-dug it, the Kimchi would smell very foul. Many Korean war vets began to use the expression In Deep Kimchi for when they were in trouble.
by Dancing with Fire December 27, 2010
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kimchi

How Koreans say "Cheese" when they take pictures.
John: Hey Eben take a picture of me.
Eben: Sure. Say " Kimchi!"
John: Kimchi!
Stephanie: Hola
Errol: Shoez?
by Sontaka December 25, 2006
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Kimchi

Made of vegetables with different seasoning. DOESN'T HAVE to be cabbage (baechu), doesn't have to be spicy, etc. There are LOADS of different kinds of kimchi, so don't act as if you know it ;).

Also used in replacement for 'cheese' when taking a photo.

The secret ingredient for a korean.
HOLY..... there are so many kinds of kimchi, mul kimchi, yeolmu kimchi, gimjang kimchi..... AND THEY TASTE SO GOOD!

"say KIMCHI"
"KIMCHI!"
*FLASH*
by The God... March 1, 2010
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Kimchi Wannabe

Someone who is obsessed with Koreans/Korean culture. (and isnt korean) That person might even try to learn Korean, make a korean name for themselves, and indulge themselves on anything korean like music (Big Bang, BoA, se7en, epik high, Rain, Wonder Girls), dramas (My Sassy Girl, Il Mare, Windstruck, JSA, A Millionaire's first love), food (Soju, kimchi, bul-dak, tang-su-yuk), etc.

Also, the person will be obsessed with Korean celebrities (for example, Rain Bi, Jyeon Ji Hyun, Seung Ri, Ji Woo Hyun, etc) and will want their significant other to be Korean.
Conversation between Kimchi Wannabe 's
Girl: annyeong haseyo, stephanie! Did you watch the ending of My Sassy Girl?! It was so cute!

Girl 2: My name isnt stephanie anymore, remember? It's Park Jun Ae! And I saw drama 20 times. Did I tell you how much I love Rain Bi?! I want to do him so badly. WE NEED TO GO TO KOREA.

Girl: SARANG HAE! <3 (^___^)
by ashreeayjun June 20, 2009
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Kimura

As a tribute to Masahiko Kimura's victory over Helio Gracie in 1955, the reverse ude-garami technique has since been commonly referred to as the Kimura lock, or simply the "Kimura", in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and, more recently, mixed martial arts circles.

A keylock (also known as a Kimura, bent armlock, figure-four armlock or ude-garami) involves holding the forearm and using it to twist the upper arm laterally or medially, similarly to turning a key in a keyhole. It is usually considered to be a shoulder lock since the primary pressure is often on the shoulder, but depending on how it is performed, significant pressure can also be applied to the elbow. It passes for a lock on the elbow in judo competitions, where only elbow locks are allowed. It can be applied from a multitude of positions, and it is the most common shoulder lock used as a submission hold in mixed martial arts competition. The keylock has several variations with their own names, for instance depending on in which direction the arm is rotated. The word "reverse" is sometimes added to signify medial rotation as in reverse keylock or reverse ude-garami, in which case the usage of just "keylock" indicates lateral rotation.

References:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masahiko_Kimura
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armlock#Kimura_.28Gyaku_ude-garami.29
www.grapplearts.com/Kimura-Article.htm
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kimura
"Wherever you see grapplers competing, whether in Pride, the UFC, Abu Dhabi or the Jiu-jitsu Mundial, you see the Kimura lock used to submit opponents and win matches!"
by punktileus September 9, 2009
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