by Nig-nog-attack August 13, 2008
Used to express over-eager or widespread, non-specific desire or action to do or have many, if not all, of a certain thing or action. Similar in use to "for reasons".
1) When asked what she wanted to do Saturday afternoon, La-a (La Dasha) said, "all the things".
2) Upon arriving at the neighborhood picnic and seeing the plethora of delectable eats, Gary promptly exclaimed, "OMG, I want to eat all the things!"
2) Upon arriving at the neighborhood picnic and seeing the plethora of delectable eats, Gary promptly exclaimed, "OMG, I want to eat all the things!"
by Mr. Silence Do-okay July 10, 2018
to go balls deep, or to give it your all. to try really hard and give a situation 100% of your attention
by vizcacha July 02, 2006
by Joel July 24, 2003
by Yosra Hamdy September 09, 2006
Acronym: AIS
A poker analogy which applies to a one night stand that's dragged out because the girl still hasn't given it up.
The player feels they've invested too much to back out now.
A poker analogy which applies to a one night stand that's dragged out because the girl still hasn't given it up.
The player feels they've invested too much to back out now.
John: What's Doug still doing with that girl? It's been 2 months and he still hasn't sealed the deal.
Mike: He's got classic All in Syndrome, he's spent weeks as her 'boyfriend' and has yet to reap any benefits.
John: That's weak, he needs to man up and cut his losses.
Mike: Agreed.
Mike: He's got classic All in Syndrome, he's spent weeks as her 'boyfriend' and has yet to reap any benefits.
John: That's weak, he needs to man up and cut his losses.
Mike: Agreed.
by LongfeatherTheGreat July 05, 2010
AKA #allthehomo, used as a response to those who incorrectly apply "no homo" to the end of a potentially homoerotic statement. EXAMPLE:
First known application was by a twitter user responding to a tweet by Milo Yiannopoulos. Yiannopoulos's tweet had contained a "#nohomo" tag followed by a question mark. Unfortunately, when Twitter later permanently banned Yiannopoulos, they also "salted the Earth" of his presence, removing any and all trace that he had ever existed on the platform by deleting not only all of his tweets but ANY user's tweet that contained mention of him, as well as private messages sent to and FROM other users.
This means we cannot actually verify who the originator of the "#allthehomo" hashtag was (though the guy who wrote this entry SWEARS it was him but I'm also fairly certain he's drunk, so...), the hashtag itself has since been reused hundreds of thousands of times across Twitter alone as well as a host of other social media platforms, often as a humorous means by which to openly disagree with the homophobic nature of a phrase like "no homo" without also sounding like your trying to lecture its user.
First known application was by a twitter user responding to a tweet by Milo Yiannopoulos. Yiannopoulos's tweet had contained a "#nohomo" tag followed by a question mark. Unfortunately, when Twitter later permanently banned Yiannopoulos, they also "salted the Earth" of his presence, removing any and all trace that he had ever existed on the platform by deleting not only all of his tweets but ANY user's tweet that contained mention of him, as well as private messages sent to and FROM other users.
This means we cannot actually verify who the originator of the "#allthehomo" hashtag was (though the guy who wrote this entry SWEARS it was him but I'm also fairly certain he's drunk, so...), the hashtag itself has since been reused hundreds of thousands of times across Twitter alone as well as a host of other social media platforms, often as a humorous means by which to openly disagree with the homophobic nature of a phrase like "no homo" without also sounding like your trying to lecture its user.
"I would like to take our relationship to the next level."
Awkward laughter. "No homo?"
Shakes head. "All the homo."
Awkward laughter. "No homo?"
Shakes head. "All the homo."
by Hard Feelings July 12, 2017