Susan Elizabeth Shaw as Strauss's Fiancée in Oppenheimer; from soap opera star to nuclear age romance. Love knows no bounds.
Example of how it's used in a sentence:
Person 1: who's that playing Strauss's fiancée in Oppenheimer?
Person 2: Susan Elizabeth Shaw as Strauss's Fiancée, the queen of soap operas. She's in love with history now!
Person 1: who's that playing Strauss's fiancée in Oppenheimer?
Person 2: Susan Elizabeth Shaw as Strauss's Fiancée, the queen of soap operas. She's in love with history now!
by courtofowls September 4, 2023

Alright boy, y'all better start hustlin' before I get dem Black-Eyed Susans out. Ye really don't wanna start raisin' sand.
by luigiman106 April 24, 2019

by anonymous October 22, 2020

by skittlesbreath October 19, 2018

A sloppy toppy move you can gift to your homies.
A hairspray but it's made of the fake butter you get from microwave popcorn.
When you and your partner go on a spontaneous matinee movie date to a foreign war memorial movie and you go a little too far on the popcorn. And the butter is everywhere, EVERYWHERE. All of the wrong places
A hairspray but it's made of the fake butter you get from microwave popcorn.
When you and your partner go on a spontaneous matinee movie date to a foreign war memorial movie and you go a little too far on the popcorn. And the butter is everywhere, EVERYWHERE. All of the wrong places
by Rosie burns December 29, 2021

by altmose April 17, 2025
