by carbonatedcourpse March 12, 2017
1) To scare someone by making a weird face while you are looking at them.
2) To touch someone in an innapropriate place.
3) Can be used to substitute any verb.
2) To touch someone in an innapropriate place.
3) Can be used to substitute any verb.
by Dr. Wenis September 8, 2006
The act of expelling gas from ones anus directly into anothers anus, for the purpose of erotic pleasure.
Tomorrow at this time I will be gishing the hell out of that guy.
He is totally gishable.
I got gished so hard last night I think I blew an O-ring!
Hey man, wanna gish?
I could go for a nice gishing right now.
Screw enimas gishing is where its at.
He is totally gishable.
I got gished so hard last night I think I blew an O-ring!
Hey man, wanna gish?
I could go for a nice gishing right now.
Screw enimas gishing is where its at.
by Mike Ginsbach April 9, 2010
by Reebz Boon March 20, 2004
by jason gerk October 23, 2009
by josiahbeale November 2, 2019
The Gish Gallop is a a debating/rhetorical technique that involves barraging an opponent with a haze of falsified statements, outright lies, and straw-man arguments. The unsuspecting opponent typically feels defenseless and frustrated against the attack and is unable to deflect it on the spot. It is named after creationism activist and professional debater Duane Gish.
Newt Gingrich is a notorious gish-galloper. In an exchange with Howard Dean he grossly distorted the facts concerning the number of Americans who would be forced into a government health insurance plan by making up the random number of 131 million:
"The way the bill in the House -- and we're talking about a specific bill -- the way the bill in the House would work, if your company didn't offer any insurance, they would pay an 8 percent tax on their personnel cost.
For most companies, that would be a net savings of 3 percent, 4 percent or 5 percent. One estimate by Lewin Associates (sic) is 131 million Americans will lose their private insurance and be pushed into a government plan."
"The way the bill in the House -- and we're talking about a specific bill -- the way the bill in the House would work, if your company didn't offer any insurance, they would pay an 8 percent tax on their personnel cost.
For most companies, that would be a net savings of 3 percent, 4 percent or 5 percent. One estimate by Lewin Associates (sic) is 131 million Americans will lose their private insurance and be pushed into a government plan."
by savagewo December 1, 2011