Engineer: I hate these Scouts, they never leave us Engies alone! All they do is run around and press X+5!
Scout: Need a dispenser here! Need a dispenser here! Need a dispenser here!
Engineer: Dammit dammit dammit!
Scout: Need a dispenser here! Need a dispenser here! Need a dispenser here!
Engineer: Dammit dammit dammit!
by MajorMario October 16, 2010
In voice procedure (the techniques used to facilitate spoken communication over two-way radios) a station may request a report on the quality and strength of signal they are broadcasting. In the military of the NATO countries, and other organizations, the signal quality is reported on two scales; the first is for signal strength, and the second for signal clarity. Both these scales range from one to five, where one is the worst and five is the best. The listening station reports these numbers separated with the word "by". Five by five therefore means a signal that has excellent strength and perfect clarity -- the most understandable signal possible.
Five by five by extension has come to mean "I understand you perfectly" in situations other than radio communication, the way Loud and Clear entered slang, post-WW2.
It is sometimes used as slang term to mean "everything is good". The character "Faith" from the "Buffy The Vampire" TV series used it this way.
Sometimes also used in athletic training.
Five by five by extension has come to mean "I understand you perfectly" in situations other than radio communication, the way Loud and Clear entered slang, post-WW2.
It is sometimes used as slang term to mean "everything is good". The character "Faith" from the "Buffy The Vampire" TV series used it this way.
Sometimes also used in athletic training.
A radio operator would ask: "Radio check -- how am I coming in?" A responder could say; "You are coming in 5 x 5 (5 by 5)". (This means that your signal strength and clarity are both 5 out of a 1-5 scale, where 5 is the best strength and clarity.)
Or, as slang:
A person would ask; "How are you doing?" The responder could say; "I'm 5 x 5." (5 by 5, meaning I'm doing/feeling great.)
Or, as slang:
A person would ask; "How are you doing?" The responder could say; "I'm 5 x 5." (5 by 5, meaning I'm doing/feeling great.)
by phreich May 1, 2010
On track, on course, going where you want to; it also refers to the central point in a targeting scope - five over and five up.
by J Fieth February 23, 2008
If you are "all square" with someone (as opposed to being just a square), or you are cool with that person, then you are 5 x 5.
by socrates+ January 28, 2006
To get at least 5 in each of the major stat categories in a basketball game; points, rebounds, assists, blocks, and steals.
by WhiteJordan April 4, 2006
by tommynepa January 26, 2006
by Galactic dictionary October 18, 2021