Ur such an indian giver!
by Anonymous April 03, 2003
by Mulvey August 22, 2006
The act of ejaculating on a girls face, and then immediately licking it off of her face, saying, "I'll get that"
Jack was fucking Jill missionary style when he pulled out and came on her face. Quickly, Jack said, I'll get that" and licked the come off of her face. Jill, looked to him and said "You indian giver!"
by Jean Claude Garay, Joe Sarasein, Jason Carr March 12, 2006
When a girl is giving a man a blow job and tricks the man into thinking she is going to take it to the face and at the last minute pulls away and instead the man cums in his own face!!
by EstebonHayes March 06, 2016
by Jimmyboy91 December 08, 2007
A person who gives a gift, (literal or figurative) and then later takes or wants it back.
This is NOT a nice thing to do!!
This is NOT a nice thing to do!!
"Here i got you this bottle of water."
"Oh, hey thank you."
"I want it back now..."
"Hmm...curious, what does that tell me? You are an Indian-giver. "
"Oh, hey thank you."
"I want it back now..."
"Hmm...curious, what does that tell me? You are an Indian-giver. "
by Joseph Edward Dedick November 22, 2011
Indian Giver
There are two popular etymologies for this term for a person who gives a gift only to later demand its return. The first is that it is based on an unfair stereotype of Native Americans, that they don't keep their word. In the other popular explanation, the term doesn't cast aspersions on Native Americans, instead it echoes the broken promises the whites made to the Indians. Neither is accurate, although the first is closer to the truth.
There are two popular etymologies for this term for a person who gives a gift only to later demand its return. The first is that it is based on an unfair stereotype of Native Americans, that they don't keep their word. In the other popular explanation, the term doesn't cast aspersions on Native Americans, instead it echoes the broken promises the whites made to the Indians. Neither is accurate, although the first is closer to the truth.
Instead the term comes from different commercial practices. To the Native Americans, who had no concept of money or currency, gifts were a form of trade goods, of exchange. One didn't give a gift without expecting one of equivalent value in return. If one could not offer an equivalent return gift, the original gift would be refused or returned. To the Europeans, who with their monetary-based trade practices, this seemed low and insulting, gifts were not for trade but were to be freely given.
The noun Indian gift dates to 1765. Indian giver follows about a century later in 1865. Originally, these reflected simply the expectation of a return gift. By the 1890s, the sense had shifted to mean one who demands a gift back.
The noun Indian gift dates to 1765. Indian giver follows about a century later in 1865. Originally, these reflected simply the expectation of a return gift. By the 1890s, the sense had shifted to mean one who demands a gift back.
by Divaznc1 June 22, 2004