by Julia Despirito March 29, 2010

When you take a crap containing half feces, half gas. The solid is propelled at such a rate that the entire inside of the toilet bowl is lined in crap.
by Jonny Crapper August 8, 2007

A word that people of a low intelligence use to describe the floor. This is something that people say to sound cool and/or fancy, but it often has the opposite effect.
by breadsauce4 September 5, 2022

by bad.jawn9405 January 29, 2019

This term significantly predates airplanes all together. The term "balls to the wall" originated with James Watt's invention of the centrifugal governor used on early steam engines (circa 1774, well before the Wright brothers at Kitty Hawk). Over the years, these types of governors were adapted for use on various other types of engines, including many aircraft engines. Some aircraft have a ball shape at the end of the throttle control, which is actually a clever reference to the governor mechanism, no doubt conceived by a witty designer. It is easy to see where one could get the (wrong) impression that "balls to the wall" would indicate the position of the throttle lever, when in fact, the term, strictly speaking, is a reference to the position of the weights on the governor.
by engineering etymologist July 20, 2010

Guy - "Hey Sarah. Do you think i could get in those sweet walls of yours?"
Girl - " Sure! But please be careful, I want them to look sweet for as long as I can."
Guy - "k."
Girl - " Sure! But please be careful, I want them to look sweet for as long as I can."
Guy - "k."
by Dem Sweet Wallz July 21, 2016

by TicalCJB September 28, 2008
