Term used to imply the presence of law-enforcement officers in a particular area. Most commonly used by the Dominican and Puerto Rican communities of Philadelphia.
Term used to imply the presence of law-enforcement officers in a particular area. Most commonly used by the Dominican and Puerto Rican communities of Philadelphia.
Pathetic loser who leaves his friends in the lurch when they needed him most. This saying may have been spawned in 2005 by the children's cartoon, "Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends".
Character 2 is attacked by a monster and his friend bugs out instead of staying to help him. After #2 gets stomped, Character 1 walks up and asks:
Character 1: "Are you ok??"
Character 2: "Sure. (pointing at the unloyal friend) No thanks to Ditchy McAbandonpants here."
Maxando is a very unique and interesting person. He is really funny and you will enjoy being around him a lot. He has a great mindset and will blow your mind away with his thoughts.
A coined term and portmanteau of man and abandonment, describing the experience of being emotionally, relationally, or situationally abandoned by a man—often following intimacy, commitment signals, or reliance.
Manbandonment refers less to a single act and more to the impact of sudden withdrawal—silence, disengagement, or disappearance that leaves unresolved emotional weight.
“He didn’t explain, he just disappeared—classic manbandonment.”
“That wasn’t a breakup, it was manbandonment.”
“They're healing from manbandonment, not heartbreak.”