It is When it is nice and hot out, you start sweating between you balls and leg so much, that it feels like you are making pancake batter.
by HardBark September 19, 2009
Get the making pancake batter mug.is a beautiful person often white normally gets put into gossip and is very pretty and smart has good grades treats her boyfriend right if you find a makinzee never break up with her
by addisyn makinzee allen May 10, 2018
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• making love
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by john himself August 6, 2007
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by RubioRocket013 October 4, 2006
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No, this does not mean to make out with a hot girl but if you are "mackin' a biddy" or "mackin' biddies" then that is definitely an option depending on where things may lead with your biddy or biddies.
*Biddies are also known as "fly honeys"*
No, this does not mean to make out with a hot girl but if you are "mackin' a biddy" or "mackin' biddies" then that is definitely an option depending on where things may lead with your biddy or biddies.
*Biddies are also known as "fly honeys"*
Bob: So what did you do over spring break, man?
Andrew: Oh I was mackin' biddies.
Phil: What is Andrew doing?
Terrence: Mackin' biddies.
Andrew: Oh I was mackin' biddies.
Phil: What is Andrew doing?
Terrence: Mackin' biddies.
by crazyypapayaa August 14, 2009
Get the mackin' biddies mug.I found this clip within the "NY Times" and it seems that sanskrit would be the oldest derivative towards "Mankind." This is a partial clipping, not the full article...
Mr. Barzun has written "that the word 'man' has its roots in the Sanskrit 'manu,' which means human being," you note, continuing: "Its counterpart in Latin is 'homo.' Thus, he argues, the word 'man' has always had a double meaning -- both male human being and human being in general. . . .
It is true that the word "man" -- which appears to derive from the same Indo-European root as "mind" and thus originally meant thinking creature -- has long had the two meanings mentioned, both of which are attested for Sanskrit "manu."
Mr. Barzun has written "that the word 'man' has its roots in the Sanskrit 'manu,' which means human being," you note, continuing: "Its counterpart in Latin is 'homo.' Thus, he argues, the word 'man' has always had a double meaning -- both male human being and human being in general. . . .
It is true that the word "man" -- which appears to derive from the same Indo-European root as "mind" and thus originally meant thinking creature -- has long had the two meanings mentioned, both of which are attested for Sanskrit "manu."
by Loquetus May 17, 2008
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