by DATBOIPYRO May 7, 2017
Get the how to make your friend shut the hell up mug.A line spoke by the one and only Bucky Barnes whose mind was screwed up with. My baby deserves better dont @ me. Also the moment Steve Rogers got his heart broken.
by vmg19 June 21, 2018
Get the who the hell is bucky? mug.A valid response to any insult and/or challenge. Even if you are unable to back up the line, saying it is enough to make anyone else's argument invalid.
Stemming from the show Gurren Lagann as a popular catchphrase.
Stemming from the show Gurren Lagann as a popular catchphrase.
1: You are so stupid.
2: Who the hell do you think I am?!
1: You couldn't win if you tried.
2: Just who the hell do you think I am?
2: Who the hell do you think I am?!
1: You couldn't win if you tried.
2: Just who the hell do you think I am?
by reggin kcalb January 5, 2014
Get the who the hell do you think i am mug.Movie reference from the Adam Sandler film “Happy Gilmore” in which a Nursing Home Orderly, played by Ben Stiller, authoritatively denies the polite request for a glass of warm milk by Happy’s grandmother.
Grandma: Sir, can I trouble you for a warm glass of milk? It helps me go to sleep.
Nursing Home Orderly: You can trouble me for a warm glass of shut the hell up. Now, you will go to sleep or I will put you to sleep. Check out the name tag. You're in my world now, grandma.
Nursing Home Orderly: You can trouble me for a warm glass of shut the hell up. Now, you will go to sleep or I will put you to sleep. Check out the name tag. You're in my world now, grandma.
by nws December 23, 2008
Get the Warm Glass of Shut the Hell Up mug.To leave somewhere immediately, to evacuate or scram.
"Get the hell out of Dodge" is a reference to Dodge City, Kansas, which was a favorite location for westerns in the early to mid 20th century. Most memorably, the phrase was made famous by the TV show "Gunsmoke," in which villians were often commanded to "get the hell out of Dodge." The phrase took on its current meaning in the 1960s and 70s when teenagers began to use it in its current form.
"Get the hell out of Dodge" is a reference to Dodge City, Kansas, which was a favorite location for westerns in the early to mid 20th century. Most memorably, the phrase was made famous by the TV show "Gunsmoke," in which villians were often commanded to "get the hell out of Dodge." The phrase took on its current meaning in the 1960s and 70s when teenagers began to use it in its current form.
by B. Nooni December 16, 2005
Get the get the hell out of dodge mug.by Sugarthebitch June 15, 2021
Get the boy what the hell boy mug.by thatsagrapegrape September 19, 2020
Get the what the hell is even that mug.