Street slang for easy money.
If you're downtown, and somebody's walking behind you shouting "sweet lick", keep your head on a swivel because you're about to get jumped.
by Ryan1981 June 26, 2006
Get the Sweet Lick mug.an adjective which means totally and utterly amazing, sdo amazing that it is/was sweet and spectacular (hence the combonation of the two)
by Zach H November 14, 2006
Get the sweetacular mug.Related Words
Scweet
• sweet
• Shweet
• sweet meat
• Sweet Potato
• Sweet Ass
• Sweet Pea
• sweet as
• sweet home alabama
• sweet sixteens
Havinig Shweetness is to have awesomeness, amazingness, or any other word that has a posotive meaning towards the person who has shweetness.
The essence of being Shweet
The essence of being Shweet
Kayla is so fucking shweet
Dude, me and Kayla got to 3rd! No way! Shweetness
Did you see Kayla's ass? Shweetness
Dude, me and Kayla got to 3rd! No way! Shweetness
Did you see Kayla's ass? Shweetness
by Ethan N June 29, 2008
Get the Shweetness mug.The descriptive name of a now-famous male hairstyle. Before it was called the "sweet-short-long", it was called "hockey hair". Of course, now it is called the "mullett". But the potential for slight shifts of emphasis within "sweet-short-long" cleary make it the best choice, as illustrated by the example below:
Friend 1: I haven't seen Jackson in awhile. Does he still have that sweet-short-long?
Friend 2: Yeah, but he's starting to lose his hair, it's more like a sweet-bald-long now.
Friend 2: Yeah, but he's starting to lose his hair, it's more like a sweet-bald-long now.
by Kurtisheath January 18, 2009
Get the Sweet-short-long mug.by Swwets December 17, 2008
Get the Sweet Claude mug.The new way to wish someone sweet dreams, in order to confuse the hell out of them. Once you wish someone "Sweet Roosters", you must not explain what it means, just walk away letting them think you have gone all Buffalo Bob on their ass and lost your fucking mind!
Sweet Rooster also acts as a double entendre, when used in the same context as above.
Sweet Rooster also acts as a double entendre, when used in the same context as above.
1)Right before Brie went to bed I wished her sweet roosters. . . The look on her face was priceless, and the restraining order she took out on me was too.
2) I came straight out and asked her if she wanted some of my sweet rooster?
2) I came straight out and asked her if she wanted some of my sweet rooster?
by Richard Aplenty January 4, 2009
Get the Sweet Roosters mug.by Stymus erectus May 21, 2009
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