by Puzzle M4ster October 29, 2010
Get the pungo mug.The word pungo is a portuguese word to describe the act of sexually plesuring yourself. Also known has "punheta", a more common word used for the same act.
*guy enters bathroom*
boy1- what the fuck is this smell ?!
boy2-Dont go in there, i just threw a Pungo.
boy1-Was it a sad one ?
boy2- Nope :)
*both high five*
boy1- what the fuck is this smell ?!
boy2-Dont go in there, i just threw a Pungo.
boy1-Was it a sad one ?
boy2- Nope :)
*both high five*
by bruno Diferent February 24, 2021
Get the Pungo mug.Related Words
A Doglike creature that is the most reluctant when it comes to chasing birds, rabbits, lizards and even fish. It has a black ear and likes to run in the marsh. It can jump up to 8 feet high.
by Beast QOC November 28, 2011
Get the Pungo mug.“I think my grandmother is secretly a Pungo”
by Saeme Crowther August 10, 2018
Get the Pungo mug.by Jacobs Tall February 22, 2026
Get the Pungo mug.Dan: Have you ever heard of. Erecto Pungo?
Keith: Yeah, why? Do you watch it?
Daniel: I do
Keith: Then fucking kill yourself weirdo, I'm telling everyone
Daniel: DAMN
Keith: Yeah, why? Do you watch it?
Daniel: I do
Keith: Then fucking kill yourself weirdo, I'm telling everyone
Daniel: DAMN
by Dann_r_ June 3, 2018
Get the Erecto Pungo mug.British slang dating from the mid to late nineteenth century, meaning soldiers. Soldiers were not popular at this time as Kipling’s poem Tommy shows (Barrack Room Ballads 1892). The word itself stems from expressions used by comedians in theatres and music halls to get a cheap laugh. The two that are most commonly quoted are "where the army goes the pong goes", or “when the wind blows the pong goes”, pong meaning smell. This quickly became pongoes meaning soldiers plural and pongo meaning an individual. Another possible explanation is that the soldiers were being likened to a large, hairy, smelly ape called a pongo. The expression is still in use today although not common, confined mainly to those who saw service in World War II or Korea (very few now) or who did National Service in Britain while this was still compulsory.
by AKACroatalin September 9, 2016
Get the Pongoes mug.