Used interjectionally at the end of a statement to make sure that what you just said is understood,and sometimes also to indicate that you want the subject dropped.
"Kenny,for the second time,you may wear only a baseball cap and a winter jacket. Nothing impressive,because you don't have liability insurance. All right?" said the claims examiner.
by JMC70 February 11, 2018
by nolangray January 19, 2012
Republicans who disassociate themselves from the Republican Party, because right winged nuts are setting the Party's agenda to favor the 1%, and in a way that is hostile toward the middle class, poor, women, gays, sick, scientists, and illegal immigrants.
Right Flight may be a big problem for the Republican Party as they become dominated by right winged nuts who are more anti-government and anarchistic than conservative, and who lack a viable agenda to solve critical problems that face the nation.
by mlhiss February 01, 2014
by Right Boob December 20, 2015
girl 1: "What did you do last night?"
girl 2: "I got really hammered, don't remember a thing. How about you?"
girl 1: " I stayed in and finished off an entire bucket of chicken. You could say I got right full last night."
girl 2: "I got really hammered, don't remember a thing. How about you?"
girl 1: " I stayed in and finished off an entire bucket of chicken. You could say I got right full last night."
by Bragan Huvne July 17, 2010
To do something adequately, or even in an exemplary manner, without necessarily seeking or receiving attention/praise for one's acts. While Left Shark is shaking (or messing) things up, Right Shark is over there making sure things go smoothly.
A: "Man, the bathrooms are spotless! Did you clean them?"
B: "It was C I think, but I never heard anyone ask him to clean up in there."
A: "Huh... I was talking to him earlier and he didn't even bring it up. Dude's so Right Shark, he should totally get a raise."
"Hey the landlord's coming over to show the house to someone today. I'm working a double today, but could you be a Right Shark and tidy up before he gets there? Thanks!"
"Wanna be my wingman when we go out tonight? Last week Jeff Left Sharked it before I could get that girl's number. You've rightsharked for me at this in the past though, so I trust you."
B: "It was C I think, but I never heard anyone ask him to clean up in there."
A: "Huh... I was talking to him earlier and he didn't even bring it up. Dude's so Right Shark, he should totally get a raise."
"Hey the landlord's coming over to show the house to someone today. I'm working a double today, but could you be a Right Shark and tidy up before he gets there? Thanks!"
"Wanna be my wingman when we go out tonight? Last week Jeff Left Sharked it before I could get that girl's number. You've rightsharked for me at this in the past though, so I trust you."
by dwana49 February 07, 2015
Right-wing Hegelian movement that treats will as a meta-specific attribute of emergent desire.
Desire is represented as a vaporware aesthetic or color ratios.
Contrasts itself from traditionalist right-wing Hegelian movements in its orientation of individual consciousness as sublime (tautological to panarchic consciousness) and state and race as materialist ciphers (objects of will).
Desire is represented as a vaporware aesthetic or color ratios.
Contrasts itself from traditionalist right-wing Hegelian movements in its orientation of individual consciousness as sublime (tautological to panarchic consciousness) and state and race as materialist ciphers (objects of will).
The Vapor Right views individual consciousness as having a meta-collective relationship to universal consciousness.
Collective consciousness is posited as an illusion of will or false-in-origin.
Collective consciousness is posited as an illusion of will or false-in-origin.
by tomorrowtomorrow August 16, 2018