As the man walked by into the club, heads turned as the schweng vibe the man gave off lighted up the room
by Yan Elkers January 27, 2010
Get the schweng mug.Schweinehund
1) an German insult, that is more popular in british movies than in Germany itself.
2) "blutiger Schweinehund" (bloody swinehound), even more popular in british movies.
3) "innerer Schweinehund" (your inner swinehound), means the enemy inside yourself that makes you passive.
1) an German insult, that is more popular in british movies than in Germany itself.
2) "blutiger Schweinehund" (bloody swinehound), even more popular in british movies.
3) "innerer Schweinehund" (your inner swinehound), means the enemy inside yourself that makes you passive.
John Cleese is a bloody Schweinehund.
by jepu July 6, 2005
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Emblems
of Switzerland (Schweiz / Suisse / Svizzera / Svizra )
History books document the first reference to the Swiss cross around 1339. At that time, the citizens of Bern tended to sew two strips of white cloth in the shape of a cross on their clothes before resolutely marching off to battle. It was only in 1815 that politicians officially recognised the white cross on a red background in the Constitution as the Swiss national emblem, which to this day remains a symbol of neutrality and independence.
of Switzerland (Schweiz / Suisse / Svizzera / Svizra )
History books document the first reference to the Swiss cross around 1339. At that time, the citizens of Bern tended to sew two strips of white cloth in the shape of a cross on their clothes before resolutely marching off to battle. It was only in 1815 that politicians officially recognised the white cross on a red background in the Constitution as the Swiss national emblem, which to this day remains a symbol of neutrality and independence.
by sinolog December 14, 2008
Get the Switzerland (Schweiz / Suisse / Svizzera / Svizra ) mug.Pronounced "shvine-hoond." German for "pig-dog." A vile insult in Germany, it has come to enjoy a modicum of popularity in the U.S., in either it's original German form, or translated to English
Schweinhund! I piss on your grandmother's grave!
You don't frighten us, English pig-dogs! Go and boil your
bottoms, sons of a silly person. I blow my nose at you,
so-called Arthur-king, you and all your silly English kaniggets.
- from Monty Python and The Holy Grail
You don't frighten us, English pig-dogs! Go and boil your
bottoms, sons of a silly person. I blow my nose at you,
so-called Arthur-king, you and all your silly English kaniggets.
- from Monty Python and The Holy Grail
by Rod Brock July 29, 2006
Get the schweinhund mug.From the German "Schweige" meaning silence and the English "Fox". This term was created on a German reality TV show in a moment of extreme frustration. It accompanies a hand gesture (pointer finger and pinkie are ears, thumb and remaining fingers create the fox face), which can be thrust into someones face while exclaiming, "schweigefox!". Referred to in Judge John Hodgman Episode 175: Failure to Appear
This is used to interrupt someone who will not stop talking. So the example is merely, "Schweigefox!"
by *stand September 12, 2014
Get the Schweigefox mug.by neccmoore1 January 23, 2020
Get the Lauren Schweikert mug.by The Schweinter December 30, 2011
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