by umnamesamiright November 19, 2023
Get the kimi wa dekinai komug. A professional caliber knock out; Originated as word suggesting a knock out that is sot hot that she or he is in a league of his or her own.
by Eugene da pro KO May 10, 2003
Get the pro KOmug. kill on sight. mostly used in fps first person shooter games. if two parties do not ~like~ each other and dislike each other ~that bad~, kill on sight.
by dvzzyjj May 11, 2021
Get the KOSmug. by KansasCityChris October 23, 2022
Get the KOSmug. 'Yo man, I saw you last night at Diz-Ko. Is it true you had a Rubber Fist rammed up your gaping arsehole so hard that your rectum hung out like a pink sock?'
by James Blunt Rubber Fist November 21, 2011
Get the Diz-Komug. Ko
Etymology
Borrowing from Japanese 劫 (kō)
Noun Edit
ko (uncountable)
Ko is a Japanese go term adopted into English usage. It describes a situation where two alternating single stone captures would repeat the original board position. The alternating captures could repeat indefinitely, preventing the game from ending. The ko rule resolves the situation.
You much play elsewhere at least once before you can go back to the alternating capture patten. The other side in term, must also play somewhere else first before come back to this alternating capture fight.
The term ko is also used more generally in reference to other repeating patterns and rules involving them, although superko is the general term for repetitions other than the take-and-take-back ko.
Etymology
Borrowing from Japanese 劫 (kō)
Noun Edit
ko (uncountable)
Ko is a Japanese go term adopted into English usage. It describes a situation where two alternating single stone captures would repeat the original board position. The alternating captures could repeat indefinitely, preventing the game from ending. The ko rule resolves the situation.
You much play elsewhere at least once before you can go back to the alternating capture patten. The other side in term, must also play somewhere else first before come back to this alternating capture fight.
The term ko is also used more generally in reference to other repeating patterns and rules involving them, although superko is the general term for repetitions other than the take-and-take-back ko.
by Tanghot July 30, 2017
Get the Komug. 