by bluizes April 22, 2011
Get the Vacial mug.An absence from work where you combine your vacation time and your recession related furlough into an extended break.
Doug: "Hey Annie, I heard your work furloughed you for a week in December?"
Annie: "Yeah, it sucks, but I'm taking my vacation the following week and going to Hawaii for 2 weeks on vacalough."
Doug: "Lucky Bitch!"
Annie: "Yeah, it sucks, but I'm taking my vacation the following week and going to Hawaii for 2 weeks on vacalough."
Doug: "Lucky Bitch!"
by MuckSLC July 12, 2009
Get the Vacalough mug.Related Words
Vacial
• vacillate
• varial kickflip
• VacaloInvertido
• Vaciil
• Vacillitate
• vucial
• vacalay
• vacalienation
• Vacalough
This trick is made of two words. Varial and Kickflip. A varaible would be a complete 180 horizantal rotation of the board. A kicklip would be a complete rotation of the board. When the board rotates you should see the underside. When these two manuevers combine you have formed a Varial Kickflip. That was a freakin' huge definition and I'm surprised you stuck around for the whole thing.
by Klyde December 13, 2003
Get the varial kickflip mug.by Krizztyle May 5, 2010
Get the Varial Flippin mug.a word in spanish used to described random hook ups with people you dont know or people you do know (as in friends).
by nweh August 22, 2009
Get the vacile mug.the coolest skateboarding move ever, nobody can do it, if done correctly it can make every woman in a 50 feet radius pregnant
dude:ey, you see patrick try the super-mc-varialtwistyflip?
other dude:he almost had it but the board caught on fire and exploded
other dude:he almost had it but the board caught on fire and exploded
by patty yenks November 1, 2007
Get the super-mc-varialtwistyflip mug.Vacilando is a Spanish term for the act of wandering when the experience of travel is more important than reaching the specific destination.
John Steinbeck (in Travels With Charley: In Search of America, 1962) wrote:
“ In Spanish there is a word for which I can't find a counterword in English. It is the verb vacilar, present participle vacilando. It does not mean vacillating at all. If one is vacilando, he is going somewhere, but does not greatly care whether or not he gets there, although he has direction.
John Steinbeck (in Travels With Charley: In Search of America, 1962) wrote:
“ In Spanish there is a word for which I can't find a counterword in English. It is the verb vacilar, present participle vacilando. It does not mean vacillating at all. If one is vacilando, he is going somewhere, but does not greatly care whether or not he gets there, although he has direction.
- I am traveling through Siberia to Mongolia, if I use 2 or 4 months getting there, I don't care.
- Oh, you're such a vacilando!
- Oh, you're such a vacilando!
by Vacilando January 12, 2010
Get the Vacilando mug.