Skip to main content
Couple from the evangelion series that will make you cry so much. Actual canon and based on "let's pair the desesperate 'n' hopeless kid with the angelic looking dude who has no clue how human works". Here, Shinji Ikari's the depressed kid, while Kaworu Nagisa (aka Tabris) is litterally the angel of the couple.
It can take three different aspects depending of the medias :

-Tsunderella and the hopeless idiot (manga)

-oooooo Mr Nagisa (anime)

-so much fluff and smoochies hhaaaa (rebuild)
But hey- no matter the "version", it's a couple doomed to reduce you to tear and broken feels, since our dear Tabris bears the curse of the "white haired anime boy" and simply can't get rid of it. Enjoy your tears and Shinji's.
-why is Carla crying ?
-oh, she just found a really cute KawoShin fanfiction but it turned out it was terribly sad and horrible all along.
-oh.
kawoshin by Kristoph Kokonose January 24, 2015
Related Words
Japanese term meaning: "death from overwork."
Karoshi has become an important social problem in Japan, where salarymen willingly work such long hours that their state of health plummets
Karoshi by ducky31 August 15, 2009

sloshed and kaboshed

When a girl gets drunk and gets laid in the same night
Last night after the bar I was sloshed and kaboshed
sloshed and kaboshed by kaboshed January 16, 2020

Hot sauce katosh 

You say this when a girl is leaving a Mexican restaurant and you would eat hot sauce out her ass.
Girl: walks out of restaurant. Guy who works there: “hot sauce katosh...”
kapish is formally spelled as capisce (pronounced as cah-peesh) which is derived from the italian word capire "to understand" and from latin capere "to grasp or to seize".

it is now used in american slang to say "got it" or "understand."

common alternative spellings you might encounter are capice, capicé, capiche, capeesh, capisch, capishe and coppish.
teacher: everyone shut up otherwise you will all be in detention, kapish?
kapish by gothiqa January 4, 2009
Often used in reply to "kapiche", ie. "you get me", meaning "Yes, I get you"
Question: The sky is blue, kapiche?
Answer: Kapoche
Kapoche by PsychologyBanter January 16, 2016