The act of copulation, carried out at speed and with little thought for the female's pleasure. The male is simply looking to ejaculate as quickly as possible.
by wayne gillespie June 26, 2005
(joe) hey bro did you get a quickie with sarah from the party.
(Mondo) ya it was more of a wam bam thank you mam.
(Mondo) ya it was more of a wam bam thank you mam.
by armando romero October 16, 2008
"Hey Bob, what's the burger of the day?" "It's the Thank God It's Fried Egg Burger, it comes with a fried egg!"
by America Lover 🇺🇸 November 17, 2018
-"For letting me display my academic abilities." A derivative of "wham-bam-thank-you-mam." This version warps the phrase horrifically, to refer to an exam taken in an academic setting.
by jsams4181 April 19, 2017
Someone asks 'How u Doing homie?' You reply:
Biggin'it up westside home boy. You cool for some gangbanging and drive-bys in my pimped ride?
Biggin'it up westside home boy. You cool for some gangbanging and drive-bys in my pimped ride?
by MC Powell with his monobrow February 26, 2005
Did you get drinks with that hot Tinder chick? Nah bruh, she can to my place and it was wham bam thank you maam.
by Smak it up flip it rub it down January 14, 2019
If someone has done you a favour and you tell them that you don't know how to thank them, they could say: "You can thank me later" in the sense of that you can do them a favour later and help them with something.
If someone does you a favour and you don't thank them for it and don't seem grateful, they may say in a joking or sarcastic way: "You can thank me later" as a gentle or subtle (even unsubtle) reminder that you should be grateful to them.
If someone gives you a word of warning or tips to avoid you getting into a crisis and you think the advice is unnecessary, they might say: "You can thank me later" or "you'll thank me later" in the sense that although you don't take their words/actions seriously now you'll eventually realise that they were right and will be grateful to them - even if you're not grateful now.
If someone does you a favour and you don't thank them for it and don't seem grateful, they may say in a joking or sarcastic way: "You can thank me later" as a gentle or subtle (even unsubtle) reminder that you should be grateful to them.
If someone gives you a word of warning or tips to avoid you getting into a crisis and you think the advice is unnecessary, they might say: "You can thank me later" or "you'll thank me later" in the sense that although you don't take their words/actions seriously now you'll eventually realise that they were right and will be grateful to them - even if you're not grateful now.
by tarik99 February 25, 2017