by Chaoticbasementchild October 11, 2020
A notorious dessert that borders on the excessive, known for its overwhelming assembly of sugary components. This cake is not for the faint of heart; it is a dense, chaotic concoction crammed with an array of sweets such as marshmallows, gummy worms, Oreos, and an excessive layering of icing and rainbow sprinkles. The Limor Cake is the antithesis of subtlety, often eliciting a mix of fascination and revulsion with its garish display of confectionery overload. It serves as a jarring testament to culinary extravagance gone awry, typically reserved for those daring enough to challenge their palate and sugar tolerance in equal measure
Person A: "What was that cake called again, the one at the party last night?"
Person B: "Limor Cake. Why?"
Person A: "Steve... he tried it. He joked about it being his last meal because of all the sugar."
Person B: "Oh no, don't tell me..."
Person A: "Yes, it's just like you think. A piece of cake, a laugh, and then... his heart. I still can't wrap my head around it."
Person B: "Limor Cake. Why?"
Person A: "Steve... he tried it. He joked about it being his last meal because of all the sugar."
Person B: "Oh no, don't tell me..."
Person A: "Yes, it's just like you think. A piece of cake, a laugh, and then... his heart. I still can't wrap my head around it."
by memedoctor3000 March 27, 2024
A frosted "space cake" (marihuana cake), covered with Molly (MDMA powder), and with liquid LSD dropped onto the cake.
I gave Mary Beth a slice of Over-The-Rainbow Cake for her birthday, and she took off all her clothes and swam through the snow for an hour!
by Tom, The Rhinoplastic Surgeon November 29, 2011
A naked cake is a slang for “shaved virgina or pussy” this term is used most freaky ladies and gents.
by Jjayyi December 23, 2022
by Pseudocrisp February 14, 2021
Noun. A small, non-optional social gathering of work colleagues held to acknowledge one of them leaving the organisation. Usually with speeches, always with cake.
by BluecoatRob May 23, 2022
by Otis Cooper March 19, 2003