Used to describe something that is shady, unsettling or darn right mystifying. Most commonly used by Generation Z, or Gen Z, to describe a person, place, or thing. "Dark" can simultaneously, but not always, have a positive and negative connotation. Used as an adjective when all other adjectives fail and are unable to express what needs to be expressed.
If you get it, you get it.
If you get it, you get it.
Me: "I'm gonna go get some broccoli at the grocery store"
You: "That's super dark. Have fun"
"That picture we snapped on the train ride home from Lolla was dark"
Me: "I'm feeling quite dark at the moment, what shall we do?"
You: "I have an idea: let's pull out all of our childhood clothes that are 10 sizes too small, put them on, and play Rock band 2"
"That one night when we ate 10 entire Little Caesar pizzas and drank 4 boxes of wine just between the two of us was dark"
Me: "Remember when we were freshmen in college?"
You: "Yes I do, we were v dark"
You: "That's super dark. Have fun"
"That picture we snapped on the train ride home from Lolla was dark"
Me: "I'm feeling quite dark at the moment, what shall we do?"
You: "I have an idea: let's pull out all of our childhood clothes that are 10 sizes too small, put them on, and play Rock band 2"
"That one night when we ate 10 entire Little Caesar pizzas and drank 4 boxes of wine just between the two of us was dark"
Me: "Remember when we were freshmen in college?"
You: "Yes I do, we were v dark"
by the future is crocs August 08, 2018
by TheDiceWoman August 12, 2007
The greatly over used word to describe the relatively tame subject matter of PG rated movies, thus diluting its true meaning. For example The Dark Knight or Harry Potter.
Compare:
Moron McMoronington: "The Dark Knight is the darkest of the two."
Grandad: "The jewish prisoners at Auschwitz saw some very dark times..."
Tom "Yes indeed."
Moron McMoronington: "The Dark Knight is the darkest of the two."
Grandad: "The jewish prisoners at Auschwitz saw some very dark times..."
Tom "Yes indeed."
by Thomas Harman September 14, 2008
the absence of light. darkness may be conquered by even the slightest amount of light, wereas, in order for darkness to conquer light, there must be no light at all.
by werekdsljfa September 10, 2010
by Antony Johnston February 01, 2006
by emily and jade May 24, 2006
by fat winner October 26, 2020