a phrase coined by JuiCe and Ben in 2007 referring to "packing a bowl", or smoking "grass" out of a pipe.
During a lengthy discussion on smoking weed, while on their way to Jack-in-the-Box, the two had walked past a sign promoting recreational lawn bowling in Santa Monica, and had thus, created the term. anyone who uses this term and claims it to be originally from them is simply a liar and a biter.
During a lengthy discussion on smoking weed, while on their way to Jack-in-the-Box, the two had walked past a sign promoting recreational lawn bowling in Santa Monica, and had thus, created the term. anyone who uses this term and claims it to be originally from them is simply a liar and a biter.
by 100percentJUICE August 09, 2008
Noun: A type of magazine used with assault rifles that resembles a "dog bowl", usually containing seventy five rounds and up. This is an actual military term.
by Scott Free October 02, 2006
1. A chunk of bud loaded that far exceeds the original dimensions of the smoking tool.
2. A bowl that, once loaded, extends far past the lip of the bowl.
2. A bowl that, once loaded, extends far past the lip of the bowl.
1. "Woah, he just loaded a Levi Bowl!"
2. "Awesome! A Levi Bowl!"
3. "Damn... that Levi Bowl killed me.."
2. "Awesome! A Levi Bowl!"
3. "Damn... that Levi Bowl killed me.."
by Itachi March 12, 2004
A group of men ejaculate into a large bowl in a race to see who can finish the quickest. The individual who finishes last is required to drink from the bowl.
by Whiskey Brother Robert L. February 14, 2012
A bowl of cannabis mixed with tobacco only.
Provides an instant head rush followed by the effects of cannabis.
Provides an instant head rush followed by the effects of cannabis.
by mrBojangles420 November 15, 2010
Blood Bowl is a little-known football-like sport practiced in the U.K. and the U.S. Blood Bowl is renowned for being very simple to play, having only three rules, and is also renowned for having the highest casualty rate of all sports, lion baiting and rugby included.
To play Blood Bowl, first find a football field, although Blood Bowl can really be played in any available space. Teams are made of 5 players, whose positions are listed below:
a 'castle' who stays in the goal and protects it, and generally wears some sort of protection, such as plate armor.
a 'horseman' who traditionally rides an animal or vehicle.
3 'forwards' who go out and get the ball.
Teams may have any number of replacement players, who are substituted whenever a player is injured or killed.
To win a Blood Bowl match, one team must score more goals on the other team (by tossing a ball into some sort of goal) than the other team scored on them by the end of two hours.
At the end of one hour of play is a 30-minute halftime break in which players are rotated in and out of play, riders wash their animals, and castles change their armor.
In addition to this, the teams rotate sides.
The final rule of Blood Bowl is that no edged weapons may be used on a player at any time. Indifferent judges may have to be called in to determine what an edged weapon is and what it isn't.
Any player who breaks a Blood Bowl rule is ejected from play, and in some more violent games, executed on the spot.
To play Blood Bowl, first find a football field, although Blood Bowl can really be played in any available space. Teams are made of 5 players, whose positions are listed below:
a 'castle' who stays in the goal and protects it, and generally wears some sort of protection, such as plate armor.
a 'horseman' who traditionally rides an animal or vehicle.
3 'forwards' who go out and get the ball.
Teams may have any number of replacement players, who are substituted whenever a player is injured or killed.
To win a Blood Bowl match, one team must score more goals on the other team (by tossing a ball into some sort of goal) than the other team scored on them by the end of two hours.
At the end of one hour of play is a 30-minute halftime break in which players are rotated in and out of play, riders wash their animals, and castles change their armor.
In addition to this, the teams rotate sides.
The final rule of Blood Bowl is that no edged weapons may be used on a player at any time. Indifferent judges may have to be called in to determine what an edged weapon is and what it isn't.
Any player who breaks a Blood Bowl rule is ejected from play, and in some more violent games, executed on the spot.
by Birdmanjoe201 September 19, 2008
An annual American college football game, usually played in late November, matching athletically above-average teams representing academically average institutions, Auburn University and the University of Alabama.
The first two Iron Bowl games were played in 1893, the only year the two teams competed twice. Following the 2007 Iron Bowl game, the all-time record stands at 38 wins for the University of Alabama, 33 wins for Auburn University, and one tie.
Many of the people most interested in the game pronounce its name in regional dialect as "Arn Bowl". In previous centuries the game was played more frequently in Birmingham, Alabama, than any other location. However, during the 21st century the game has been played only on the campuses of the participating institutions, located in Alabama towns named Tuscaloosa and Auburn.
Three statistical quirks mark the history of the series:
(1) For an interval of 41 years, beginning in 1907 and ending in 1947, the game was not played, due to animosity between the two institutions. Some yet feel that the series should not have been renewed.
(2) In the interval 1973-1981, the University of Alabama won nine consecutive Iron Bowl games, all of which were played in Birmingham.
(3) Auburn University has never lost an Iron Bowl game played at its opponent's Tuscaloosa campus, winning all seven of those.
The first two Iron Bowl games were played in 1893, the only year the two teams competed twice. Following the 2007 Iron Bowl game, the all-time record stands at 38 wins for the University of Alabama, 33 wins for Auburn University, and one tie.
Many of the people most interested in the game pronounce its name in regional dialect as "Arn Bowl". In previous centuries the game was played more frequently in Birmingham, Alabama, than any other location. However, during the 21st century the game has been played only on the campuses of the participating institutions, located in Alabama towns named Tuscaloosa and Auburn.
Three statistical quirks mark the history of the series:
(1) For an interval of 41 years, beginning in 1907 and ending in 1947, the game was not played, due to animosity between the two institutions. Some yet feel that the series should not have been renewed.
(2) In the interval 1973-1981, the University of Alabama won nine consecutive Iron Bowl games, all of which were played in Birmingham.
(3) Auburn University has never lost an Iron Bowl game played at its opponent's Tuscaloosa campus, winning all seven of those.
by Placekicker July 23, 2008