Grassing out vocalizes the act of someone passing out or being overwhelmed and choking before, after or during present smoke caused by fumes induced by incinerated Cannabis leaves.
dude 1: first bong ever WHOOOOO I'm gonna get soo high
dude 2: go on man take a hit
1 minute later while dude one is Grassing Out
dude 2: WHoa bro he tots grassed out
The Dude: Far out man, far out.
dude 2: go on man take a hit
1 minute later while dude one is Grassing Out
dude 2: WHoa bro he tots grassed out
The Dude: Far out man, far out.
by Niels Hammers Ruler of Worlds September 27, 2013
Another word for "Bitch Ass"
by bullissenior'13 May 17, 2008
by lilsavage81401 April 03, 2018
by Joe725 June 25, 2006
by Naturelover12345678969 May 26, 2017
A barrier (real or perceived) that prevents a team or individual from reaching the pinnacle of a respective sport.
Members of college football conferences that are not members of the Bowl Championship Series (BCS) are often left out of major bowl bids (see: Utah). That's a real barrier (BCS rules favor greatly teams from BCS conferences) that does not preclude participation, per se, but the obstacles are significant.
Also a phenomenon evidenced when a really decent program (e.g., college football) can not seem to make the transition to a national and/or perennial powerhouse due to self-imposed barriers. Virginia Tech, for example, fails each year to be considered in the same category as USC, Texas, and Oklahoma, teams that have won many national championships. The barrier is a failure to acknowledge and resolve internal staff issues (primarily, the offensive coordinator) which leads to a general perception by the players that they can't play at the Tier 1 level. In this case, the coaching staff has created a "grass ceiling" through which the players can not progress.
Also a phenomenon evidenced when a really decent program (e.g., college football) can not seem to make the transition to a national and/or perennial powerhouse due to self-imposed barriers. Virginia Tech, for example, fails each year to be considered in the same category as USC, Texas, and Oklahoma, teams that have won many national championships. The barrier is a failure to acknowledge and resolve internal staff issues (primarily, the offensive coordinator) which leads to a general perception by the players that they can't play at the Tier 1 level. In this case, the coaching staff has created a "grass ceiling" through which the players can not progress.
by Tad McDonald February 08, 2009
by jack n jill up the hill July 19, 2010