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DO YOU HAVE A LIGHTER?

It is a sublimal implication definition.

What kind of ASSHOLE you are.

The US MARSHALLS arrest of perpetrators definition. The very ruining of all the distributive marketing of SHAWK BLUEBIRD including their plan. See next definition . DYHALSB
DO YOU HAVE A LIGHTER? (ASSHOLE) on you as you are going to prison to get a lot of TRAINING?. TMFLZ

DO YOU HAVE A LIGHTER? , (ASSHOLE,) ,,the dry , spitred, tight or lubed up.

DO YOU HAVE A LIGHTER? AS they are going to steal your property. Not if ELON has anything to do with it as TESLA IS A STEAL as it gives you PEACE OF MIND.
by DEFINITIVE PEDOPHILE May 18, 2021
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Do you need some butter for that toast

Something cool people say after someone's been roasted, another way of saying, "do you need some ice for that burn"-but cooler. Say it if you want the instant clout.
Person 1: You're stupid
Person 2: Your mom is Stupid
Person 3: Oooooh, do you need some butter for that TOAST
by thepope123 February 9, 2019
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Whatever, I do what I want!

Cartman says it when he goes on Maury pretending to be a pre-teen ho.
Whatever, Whatever, I do what I want. I smoke crack, I do drugs, I drink alcihaal. I once killed SIX baby seals with my bare hands.
by Anneke October 5, 2003
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Do your nosehairs reach your lips?

Used to ask or imply someone is stupid or shortsighted
Jay, you thought you could beat Nich in Soul Caliber? Do your nosehairs reach your lips?
by Alberich69 August 23, 2022
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Glad i could do my part

I think you may have done too much.
"Chopper, talk to disfigured World War 2 veterans
who aren't as bitter as they should be."
"Glad i could do my part."
by WeRerrr October 22, 2009
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what the hell are you doing here

This isn't even a word..
by MyMomIsNotYourMom October 12, 2017
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What do our parents want?

Generally, used as a rhetorical question in colloquial parlance. However, some philosophers have argued that because one can never be certain of what our parents want, the question becomes unanswerable. In this sense, the expression is often considered a paradox since, as some philosophers claim, all questions have at least one answer.

1: a rhetorical question used to convey puzzlement or confusion.
2: a rhetorical question used to express one's belief that the question being asked or the subject matter being contemplated is hopelessly unanswerable.
3: ("Randian" usage) a rhetorical question - used similarly to the query "Who is John Galt?" found throughout "Atlas Shrugged" - meant to be interpreted as meaning: why ask questions that have no answers or where the answers are not readily obtainable?
1: Engineer 1: "Why won't the doohicky fit into the whatchamacallit?" Engineer 2: "What do our parents want?"

2: Poli-Sci Major: "Why did we invade Iraq anyway?" Hippie Roommate: "What do our parents want?"

3: "What do our parents want?" The light was ebbing, and Eddie Willers could not distinguish the bum's face. The bum had said it simply, without expression. But from the sunset far at the end of the street, yellow glints caught his eyes, and the eyes looked straight at Eddie Willers, mocking and still - as if the question had been addressed to the causeless uneasiness within him. -- Atlas Shrugged, Ayn Rand
by William Santiago August 3, 2007
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