TO masturbate ones girlfriend to the point of excretion of seminal fluids, whilst jumping out of an airplane, using a flashlight.
by mikehunt bendover nelson August 16, 2011
The act of taking a lit cigarette bud and throwing it at a nearby pedestrian/friend. More often than not, if the victim is not a friend, they will get pissed.
Person 1: Hey, dude?? -Takes a hit from his cigarette-
Person 2: Yeah? -Turns to face him-
Person 1: FIREFLY. -Proceeds to throw burning cigarette bud at victim-
Person 2: AH. DICK. YOU HIT ME IN THE EYE. D:<
Person 2: Yeah? -Turns to face him-
Person 1: FIREFLY. -Proceeds to throw burning cigarette bud at victim-
Person 2: AH. DICK. YOU HIT ME IN THE EYE. D:<
by TuEresMuyBlanco January 17, 2011
by Pittsburgh slang king January 17, 2019
Kim Kardashian
She is a firefly, she went from the quaterback to the point guard after the Final Four.
I don't like her no more, because she is a firefly. She left me for my friend in the band.
She is a firefly, she went from the quaterback to the point guard after the Final Four.
I don't like her no more, because she is a firefly. She left me for my friend in the band.
by @MookX_XNasty March 01, 2011
When someone flicks a cigarette out their window and said cigarette flies back into their window or the window of a surrounding car. Douche points are awarded for hitting the driver of the other car.
by OnikunZ April 18, 2009
Obscure slang term for "scared/scary" due to the chilling effect they have on easily confounded stoners and/or people tripping on mushrooms in fields.
A: "Did you tell your dad that you're pregnant yet?"
B: "Nah I'm way too fireflies about the whole thing..."
B: "Nah I'm way too fireflies about the whole thing..."
by HonkyDave November 10, 2012
Arguably, the most depressing anime movie you may ever see.
Written and directed by Isao Takahata for Shinchosha, it's an adaptation of the semi-autobiographical novel by the same name written by Akiyuki Nosaka, intended as a personal apology to the author's own sister.
It is a moving story with rather graphic depictions of the suffering that occurred in Japan at the end of World War II.
It tells the history of two young children (Seita and his younger sister Setsuko) who are left on their own after lossing their mother to the firebombings in Kobe.
The movie starts with a dying, starved Seita at Sannomiya Station which is spotted by a janitor. The janitor comes and digs through his things. He finds a candy tin, containing ashes (Setsuko's) and decides to throw them out. From the ashes spring the spirits of both children flying with a group of fireflies which then passes to a flashback that beggins telling the two kid's struggle during that time of their lives, and how they tried to survive by their own in a war-thorn Japan.
At the end of the film, we see the spirits of Seita and Setsuko who are seen sitting side by side, looking down on the modern-day city of Kobe, no longer starved and raggedy and rather peaceful.
Due to the graphic and truly emotional depiction of the negative consequences of war on society and the individuals therein, some critics consider it to be one of the most powerful anti-war movies ever made. Animation historian Ernest Rister compares the film to Schindler's List and says, "it is the most profoundly human animated film I've ever seen." The story is based on the semi-autobiographic novel by the same name, whose author, Nosaka, lost his sister due to malnutrition in 1945 wartime Japan. He blamed himself for her death and wrote the story so as to make amends to her and help him accept the tragedy.
The movie has a running time of total 88 minutes and a live-action film remake was made recently (2005)to conmemorate the 60th anniversary of the end of World War II.
Written and directed by Isao Takahata for Shinchosha, it's an adaptation of the semi-autobiographical novel by the same name written by Akiyuki Nosaka, intended as a personal apology to the author's own sister.
It is a moving story with rather graphic depictions of the suffering that occurred in Japan at the end of World War II.
It tells the history of two young children (Seita and his younger sister Setsuko) who are left on their own after lossing their mother to the firebombings in Kobe.
The movie starts with a dying, starved Seita at Sannomiya Station which is spotted by a janitor. The janitor comes and digs through his things. He finds a candy tin, containing ashes (Setsuko's) and decides to throw them out. From the ashes spring the spirits of both children flying with a group of fireflies which then passes to a flashback that beggins telling the two kid's struggle during that time of their lives, and how they tried to survive by their own in a war-thorn Japan.
At the end of the film, we see the spirits of Seita and Setsuko who are seen sitting side by side, looking down on the modern-day city of Kobe, no longer starved and raggedy and rather peaceful.
Due to the graphic and truly emotional depiction of the negative consequences of war on society and the individuals therein, some critics consider it to be one of the most powerful anti-war movies ever made. Animation historian Ernest Rister compares the film to Schindler's List and says, "it is the most profoundly human animated film I've ever seen." The story is based on the semi-autobiographic novel by the same name, whose author, Nosaka, lost his sister due to malnutrition in 1945 wartime Japan. He blamed himself for her death and wrote the story so as to make amends to her and help him accept the tragedy.
The movie has a running time of total 88 minutes and a live-action film remake was made recently (2005)to conmemorate the 60th anniversary of the end of World War II.
Grave of the Fireflies is a 1988 anime movie written and directed by Isao Takahata based on the 1967 semi-autobiographical novel by Japanese novelist Akiyuki Nosaka by the same name.
by Psycho panda July 14, 2008