by lemwigbaddie August 18, 2021
Get the Tsephel mug.Ill Japanese gameshow featuring 5 gangstaz who do crazy things with 1000 times the imagination of that shitty American programme Jackass.
by George Payne April 12, 2008
Get the gaki no tsukai mug.Small town south west British Columbia. Known for fence bowling, and mass numbers of pot heads. "Shit Hawks" roam the streets at night and have a hang out point outside of the central Tim Hortons. Lots of retired people present in the demo graphs.
by P-Dubz June 11, 2008
Get the tsawwassen mug.by pengin9 May 14, 2006
Get the tsubasa mug.1: being on the surface sharp and sarcastic (tsuntsun) but underneath lovestruck and fawning (deredere); characteristic of a gap between acted out actions and feelings in mind;
2: normally being sharp but at some prompt suddenly becoming lovestruck; hot-cold personality type
2: normally being sharp but at some prompt suddenly becoming lovestruck; hot-cold personality type
そうやって俺のことを気にしつつ、しかし素直になりきれない、そのツンデレtsundereさが今若い男の間で大ブーム!
by grenciae December 22, 2008
Get the tsundere mug.
Get the tsinelas mug.(Noun) The tsundoku, that Ode to the Great Unread, Shrine to the Word, Bibliophile's Inukshuk, Pillar of Light and Savior of Sorts, is the artistic and/or scientific materialization of piling up newly acquired books, in a TRP or TRQ, for utilitarian (lack of reading time/space/bookshelves) and/or psycho-pathologic (abibliophobia, fetish, OCD, hoarding or addiction) reasons.
The term dates back to the japanese Meiji era (1868-1912) and literally means 'reading pile'. Formed from the expression 'tsunde oku' (to let something pile up), in which 'oku' was swapped out for 'doku' (to read); the words then got cleverly mushed together.
The tsundoku scale ranging from just one unread book to a serious hoard, everyone is most likely to be "tsundokursed" one way or the other. Luckily, this isn't the worst problem one can have.
The term dates back to the japanese Meiji era (1868-1912) and literally means 'reading pile'. Formed from the expression 'tsunde oku' (to let something pile up), in which 'oku' was swapped out for 'doku' (to read); the words then got cleverly mushed together.
The tsundoku scale ranging from just one unread book to a serious hoard, everyone is most likely to be "tsundokursed" one way or the other. Luckily, this isn't the worst problem one can have.
I have no feelings of guilt regarding the piles of books I have not read and perhaps will never read; I know that my tsundokus have unlimited patience. They will wait for me till the end of my days.
by PAR1138 October 20, 2017
Get the Tsundoku mug.