by BelovedShawty December 2, 2021
Get the Comet QuackyComet mug.The feeling when your foot or toes fall asleep from being deprived of the flow of blood from usually accidental pressure. Or Maybe diabetes who knows. e.g. Lighthearted term
-wakes up- "Whoa my foot's asleep, actually it's like pins in needles in my toes and it kinda tickles" -Friend-"Nah man you got 'comatoes'!"
by MrKendall December 5, 2021
Get the Comatoes mug.Related Words
A place where you go to hang out and talk anything pop or geek culture. Run by the best Custom Controller designer and makers!!!
by V1p3r_hax March 19, 2022
Get the Comic Controllers mug.As per the "Hotel California" lyrics: “On a dark desert highway, cool wind in my hair/Warm smell of colitas, rising up through the air...."
Here's some more background into the term "colitas" (quelites).
My partner and I came about this kind of a backwards way. I was studying plants prized by local curanderas (female folk healers) of the Northern New Mexico/San Luis Valley area of Colorado, and came upon "quelites," pronounced "Keh-LEE-tehs." The term specifically refers to a local weed that grows prolifically, colloquially known as "lambsquarters." Further research found quelites is a Mexican/American term for any wild green. We've also seen it as a Spanish translation on a bag of spinach from the grocery store. My partner remarked one day, "I know where I've heard that term before," and sang off the first two lines of the Hotel California song, thus the connection. Quelites and colitas are phonetically identical. The term is used in different geographic regions to refer to specific plants that grow locally, but, much like common names in English, can mean quite different species of plants.
Here's some more background into the term "colitas" (quelites).
My partner and I came about this kind of a backwards way. I was studying plants prized by local curanderas (female folk healers) of the Northern New Mexico/San Luis Valley area of Colorado, and came upon "quelites," pronounced "Keh-LEE-tehs." The term specifically refers to a local weed that grows prolifically, colloquially known as "lambsquarters." Further research found quelites is a Mexican/American term for any wild green. We've also seen it as a Spanish translation on a bag of spinach from the grocery store. My partner remarked one day, "I know where I've heard that term before," and sang off the first two lines of the Hotel California song, thus the connection. Quelites and colitas are phonetically identical. The term is used in different geographic regions to refer to specific plants that grow locally, but, much like common names in English, can mean quite different species of plants.
by LBZeep January 21, 2022
Get the colitas mug.by awesomecoolcute March 2, 2022
Get the Comic sans personality mug.Kyle treated Amber with the ultimate coitusey as he proceeded to caress her undercarriage in pursuit of her lady parts!
by Acmeusa April 28, 2022
Get the Coitusey mug.My lady loves Coitus Inherrumptus. I call anal sex that because it reminds me of my high school Latin teacher, whom I also fucked in the ass. I use whom because it’s proper English, which reminds me of my college English professor who blew me in front of my roommate, but that’s neither here nor there.
by Goosey Goose May 6, 2022
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