1) A underpaid, overworked, overconfident “locksmith” that runs all over a big city and pretends to be a professional. He/she is completely unable to function without a written guide on how to work on the specific vehicle he is currently working on even though his/her capability to read the manual is in question most of the time. This person cannot generate a key without a keycode for the simplest vehicles on the road and are a cancer to locksmiths that have worked their entire life to perfect their skills.
Noun- A long haired, sometimes bearded, Marine hatin Sailor with certain medical skills that would go through the very gates of Hell to tend to a wounded Marine.
Often called 'Doc', they are about the closest thing to being a Marine a person can be without actually being one.
Source: Sgt, USMC
Marine Sgt: Where is Doc?
Marine 2: He's inside with the rest of the squad clearing the building
Marine Sgt: Nice.
Marine 2: Oh here he comes
Corpsman: Buildings clear
Marine Sgt: Not bad for a squid
Enlisted Sailors who have the time honored job of providing various nursing, medical, and clerical duties for the Navy in hospitals or on ships or attached to the Marine corps.Generall called pecker checkers,devil docs or just doc by sailors and marines.
Marine One: Hey where's our Corpsman?
Marine Two: Doc had to take staff sgt to get his bore punched
They understood each other and connected on a core level, respected this exclusiveprivilege, and vowed to protect the depth of their coreship before a series of betrayal threatened its existence.
Used at the bottom of an email, text message, tweet, facebook message, blog post, forum post or any other message.
COTRESM indicates that the writer of the message is aware of a higher probability of spelling mistakes and wants to deliver a message faster instead of wasting time correcting mistakes.