When you happen to be walking the same way as the person in front of you, but since your not following them, it means that they are following you...from the front.
Guy 1: I hope it doesn't seem like were following these people, they've been walking in front of us for like 3 blocks.
Guy 2: Naw Man, they're front following us. Stalkers...
Guy 2: Naw Man, they're front following us. Stalkers...
by ellykay;) November 30, 2010
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When a woman becomes very excited to the point where her love nectar shows on the outside of her pants.
Vrin: I couldn't believe Sally Sue when she came home from her job interview.
Jadu: How dat?
Vrin: She said the guy inteviewing her was a real turn on and when she got up, the interviewer told her to go to the bathroom and attend to her nookielear fallout. She was real embarassed and almost threw up on the guy.
Jadu: How dat?
Vrin: She said the guy inteviewing her was a real turn on and when she got up, the interviewer told her to go to the bathroom and attend to her nookielear fallout. She was real embarassed and almost threw up on the guy.
by jethrojones December 12, 2007
Get the nookielear fallout mug.A strongly Capitalist, Republican, and general right-wing ideology that states that poor people should remain poor (they should help themselves) and that charities should be abolished.
Has been known to be particularly pro-war and all those in the RAF are held in specific high-esteem. All those in the Navy, however, are considered second-class citizens.
Has been known to be particularly pro-war and all those in the RAF are held in specific high-esteem. All those in the Navy, however, are considered second-class citizens.
War-mongering;
"We need to show these other countries who is boss"
Anti-charities:
"According to Fellowism, poor people should help themselves"
For-RAF
"Everyone should go to air cadets!"
"We need to show these other countries who is boss"
Anti-charities:
"According to Fellowism, poor people should help themselves"
For-RAF
"Everyone should go to air cadets!"
by Dale Walford November 22, 2006
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Get the Fair Winds & Following Seas mug.You follow a friend or acquaintance on a social networking site (Instagram/Twitter) in exchange for them to follow you. You don't really know them, it's used to boost followers but with people you kinda know. It's called a "mutual follow" because once someone unfollows, the other follows suite.
"Did that nigga really unfollow me? thought we had a mutual follow, I aint interested in yo shit either bruh"
by Derack January 10, 2015
Get the mutual follow mug.Refers to a waistcoat-wearing, pocket-watch-wielding white rabbit, hurrying along and muttering, "Oh dear! I shall be late!" in Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland (1865), whom Alice follows down a rabbit hole into Wonderland.
Awesome rock band Jefferson Airplane's 1967 song White Rabbit retold the story of Alice's adventures as though they were a psychedelic drug trip. But whether you take it literally or metaphorically, following the white rabbit means following an unlikely clue, an innocuous, unbelievable (but also, frankly a bit ridiculous) sign, to find oneself in the midst of more or less extraordinary, marvelous, amazing circumstances that challenge one's fundamental beliefs, expand one's horizons &/or perception of realities, transform one's perspective, and change one's life.
The phrase has become commonplace in popular culture; e.g. in the 1999 film The Matrix, the resistance fighter folks use the trope of following a white rabbit to lead Neo/Mr Anderson/The One out of the matrix. Oddly enough, though, the phrase hasn't filtered through as a metaphor in non-fantastical contexts to any appreciable degree. Outside of science fiction or fantasy, if a writer refers to the white rabbit, s/he is almost certainly specifically alluding to previous uses, usually to Carroll. (We should change that!)
Awesome rock band Jefferson Airplane's 1967 song White Rabbit retold the story of Alice's adventures as though they were a psychedelic drug trip. But whether you take it literally or metaphorically, following the white rabbit means following an unlikely clue, an innocuous, unbelievable (but also, frankly a bit ridiculous) sign, to find oneself in the midst of more or less extraordinary, marvelous, amazing circumstances that challenge one's fundamental beliefs, expand one's horizons &/or perception of realities, transform one's perspective, and change one's life.
The phrase has become commonplace in popular culture; e.g. in the 1999 film The Matrix, the resistance fighter folks use the trope of following a white rabbit to lead Neo/Mr Anderson/The One out of the matrix. Oddly enough, though, the phrase hasn't filtered through as a metaphor in non-fantastical contexts to any appreciable degree. Outside of science fiction or fantasy, if a writer refers to the white rabbit, s/he is almost certainly specifically alluding to previous uses, usually to Carroll. (We should change that!)
'There's something fishy going on here.'
'Well,' said Q, jerking her head toward the door to the stairwell, through which the tattooed woman was disappearing. 'You'd better follow the white rabbit, then.'
'Well,' said Q, jerking her head toward the door to the stairwell, through which the tattooed woman was disappearing. 'You'd better follow the white rabbit, then.'
by FTWR August 19, 2013
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