by Sossololpipi February 13, 2021
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A famous quote now used by many for mocking others. It originated from "The Sixth Sense" by M. Night Shyamalan. Cole Sear (Haley Joel Osment) said this line. The popularity of this line had grown, and now many people say things similiar to this, like how people always change the phrase "got milk?". Some examples of how it has canged are, "I see white people", "I see black people", or "I see naked people".
Cole Sear: I see dead people.
Malcolm Crowe: In your dreams?
Cole shakes his head no
Malcolm Crowe: While you're awake?
Cole nods
Malcolm Crowe: Dead people like, in graves? In coffins?
Cole Sear: Walking around like regular people. They don't see each other. They only see what they want to see. They don't know they're dead.
Malcolm Crowe: How often do you see them?
Cole Sear: All the time.
Malcolm Crowe: In your dreams?
Cole shakes his head no
Malcolm Crowe: While you're awake?
Cole nods
Malcolm Crowe: Dead people like, in graves? In coffins?
Cole Sear: Walking around like regular people. They don't see each other. They only see what they want to see. They don't know they're dead.
Malcolm Crowe: How often do you see them?
Cole Sear: All the time.
by Seventh Sense December 25, 2005
The remains of human decay that end up seeping out of the bottom of coffin buried under the soil.
This "juice cocktail" is comprised of liquid drainage from orifices that include the nasal and rectal passages, and embalming fluids that seep into the soil and pollute water, thus disturbing the Earth's ecosystem.
This "juice cocktail" is comprised of liquid drainage from orifices that include the nasal and rectal passages, and embalming fluids that seep into the soil and pollute water, thus disturbing the Earth's ecosystem.
"That new construction home on Sandra Circle shares its yard with the cemetary. Thier sump pump is constantly pumping the dead people juice from their basement into our lovely cul-de-sac'd street, 24 hours a day. I wonder if that juice carries the threat of rectal cancer, foot fungus or conjunctivitis? There goes the neighborhood!"
by Sinister Sally May 20, 2009
by LilacTheRat September 24, 2019
Sarcastic way of saying that what you are told is absolute nonsense, unviable (not capable of succeeding, esp financially "the pit had proved economically unviable"), or unpractical.
by rperazag June 25, 2010