Spanish word for coke traffikker. Mainly used by dominicans and other spanish speaking newyorkers in reference to people who move kilos of that pure grade A colombian white on white cocaine.
Klok compay oye Tengo conexione con lo verdadero kilero de sinaloa. Tamo en pila!
Translation:
What it is compadre. Listen I got conections with the true coke boys from sinaloa. We on the move!
Translation:
What it is compadre. Listen I got conections with the true coke boys from sinaloa. We on the move!
by badboy7ity September 8, 2013
Get the kilero mug.Defintion really means "culero" one that backs out on there word, doesnt come through, or just is a plain ass!
Meño is a Kilero!He never comes through!
by Mota September 4, 2007
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Kilero
• kieron
• Kilroy
• killeropm
• Killroy
• kilroy was here
• kikeroach
• kiler
• [Killeroo]
• Kalero
The mighty orc warrior that roams Valhalla. Said to have a big, black, barbarian raged dick that can easily split a human woman in two. The Kilrog isn't interested in complex ideals, as he likes to solve problems with violence.
Innocent Bystander: "Oh hey, how are you doing today Mighty Kilrog?"
Kilrog: *Pulls outs battleaxe and slices innocent bystanders head off*
Kilrog: "Poor fool, Kilrog have no time for simple peasants."
Kilrog: *Pulls outs battleaxe and slices innocent bystanders head off*
Kilrog: "Poor fool, Kilrog have no time for simple peasants."
by BionicWhiteJedi September 20, 2014
Get the Kilrog mug.A Chill mf who minds his business and is chill af mfs just hate his name and I bet he does too so just really get to know him to understand him cuz he been through sum shit not everyone with the name kieron is a pervert
by biggiebongobomb March 25, 2021
Get the Kieron mug.An old graffiti that U.S. GI's would write on the walls of occupied areas.This was very popular During WW2 and the Korean war. This Legend of how "Kilroy was here" starts is with James J. Kilroy, a shipyard inspector during WWII. He chalked the words on bulkheads to show that he had been there and inspected the riveting in the newly constructed ship. To the troops in those ships, however, it was a complete mystery — all they knew for sure was that he had "been there first." As a joke, they began placing the graffiti wherever they (the US forces) landed or went, claiming it was already there when they arrived.
Kilroy became the US super-GI who always got there first — wherever GI's went. It became a challenge to place the logo in the most unlikely places. It was said to be atop Mt. Everest, the Statue of Liberty, the underside of the Arch de Triumphe, and scrawled in the dust on the moon. An outhouse was built for the exclusive use of Truman, Stalin, and Churchill who were there for the Potsdam conference. The first person to use it was Stalin. He emerged and asked his aide (in Russian), "Who is Kilroy?"
The Kilroy fad died some time in the 1960s, but can be still seen around the world.
Kilroy became the US super-GI who always got there first — wherever GI's went. It became a challenge to place the logo in the most unlikely places. It was said to be atop Mt. Everest, the Statue of Liberty, the underside of the Arch de Triumphe, and scrawled in the dust on the moon. An outhouse was built for the exclusive use of Truman, Stalin, and Churchill who were there for the Potsdam conference. The first person to use it was Stalin. He emerged and asked his aide (in Russian), "Who is Kilroy?"
The Kilroy fad died some time in the 1960s, but can be still seen around the world.
by --Kilroy-- December 31, 2011
Get the Kilroy Was Here mug.In December 1946 the New York Times credited James J. Kilroy, a welding inspector at the Bethlehem Steel shipyard in Quincy, Massachusetts, with starting the craze. Usually, inspectors used a small chalk mark, but welders were erasing those to get double-paid for their work. To prevent this, Mr Kilroy marked his welding work with the long crayoned phrase ("Kilroy was here") on the items he inspected. The graffito became a common sight around the shipyard and was imitated by workers when they were drafted and sent around the world. As the war progressed, people began opening void spaces on ships for repair, and the mysterious Mr Kilroy's name would be found there, in sealed compartments "where no one had been before."
"Kilroy was here..."
by some random dude that knows some stuff June 26, 2006
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