by Slimeball634 August 31, 2020

Used to describe anything that, through the application of science so advanced it may as well be magic, exhibits seemingly impossible behaviors or properties. The key is that the behavior/property on exhibit only -seems- impossible; if the observer had an understanding of advanced science, it would make perfect sense. "Made of future" used to be applicable only in speculative fiction, but is increasingly appropriate in the context of the real world.
Usage "Wait...how does the thin fabric of a guard uniform stop a knife blade?" "Dude, the uniform is made of future". Note: actually, it's made of Kevlar fibers saturated with non-Newtonian goo that locks the fibers in place under sudden impacts, but "made of future" is simpler.
by balloonie-cat October 11, 2014

To do something exeptionally great when drunk. This word was coined by the famous David Engelin, a pedophile in Sollentuna, Sweden. Called "mada" in Swedish, pronounced mad+ah.
I went mading last night. I got drunk, ate crayfish, drank mintu, got asked what I was doing by a big security guard, to which I answered "mading", got kicked out.
by David Engelin disciple May 3, 2024

by Ack! I'm chocking April 6, 2021

by Imthehamman May 24, 2023

A phrase to describe the act of taking something someone else has made and releasing it as their own.
Offender: Hello, check out my creation called ______. You can obtain it from ________.
Response: I made this.
Response: I made this.
by Project Sloth July 20, 2022

Rugby is much rougher then football so the way he grabbed his hair made him understand the difference.
"He grabbed my hair in a way that made me understand the difference between rugby and football." - Red, White & Royal Blue
by nickname28 September 25, 2023
