A British term used to rebuke a small boy who takes favours and presents for granted without giving appropriate thanks: also used after other discourtesies. Usually used by his mother.
Lady Muck is the feminine equivalent.
Lady Muck is the feminine equivalent.
Mother Alex, say thank-you when I give you your sandwiches. Who do you think you are: Lord Muck?
Mother Alice, don't just sit there like Lady Muck when you can see I need a hand with passing round the plates.
Mother Alice, don't just sit there like Lady Muck when you can see I need a hand with passing round the plates.
by benbisley August 21, 2008

A person who cheats or uses loopholes or using rule lawyering toward their advantage. Often filling in gaps with "cheese" or "leaps of logic" when rules are not defined in rule books for games.
by Dianna Toney April 10, 2005

a book which if you like you are not "uncool" , but you are simply on a higher level than the cavemen who claim that people who read the said book attain more "pussy"
by jared June 15, 2003

One who cheats or paraphrases the rules of games incorrectly to their advantage. Cheese lords often use rules lawyering to enhance their position. One who reads between the lines or fills in the gaps with "cheese" in the rules and instructions for games with grand leaps of logic.
by Dianna Toney April 10, 2005

1) A book.
2) A damn good movie.
3) An excuse to skip school.
4) A way of seeing Liv Tyler without having to download mass amounts of fake porn.
2) A damn good movie.
3) An excuse to skip school.
4) A way of seeing Liv Tyler without having to download mass amounts of fake porn.
by Anonymous January 20, 2003

Someone who has extreme amounts of rizz, sometimes uncontrollable. Also the title for the principle of rizz academy
by Him kardashian October 10, 2022

Robert: "Rick said that Tom got drunk and high last night, fucked a set of smoking hot twins, and woke up this morning and cooked everybody pancakes."
Jesse: "Man, Tom is a real Lord Byron!"
Jesse: "Man, Tom is a real Lord Byron!"
by dexter0284 March 13, 2011
