Not the national Anthem of England, but the entire united kingdom and dependancies like the falklands, Gibraltar etc.
God save the queen, she ain't no human bein'.
98π 37π
How someone kicks off a conversation where it will be only they talking, and you sweating. Just the mere mention of these words can frighten your partner or employees.
The best comeback is indifference to what they're saying, and a hearty "Fuck you". Or, alternatively, plan to do something that they'll really like as soon as they say this, then, at the end of it, say this to them, and fuck them off.
there are enough examples in this definition already.
7π 4π
Triple-insult used when someone wants something and time is of the esscence.
"Give me the keys, you fucking cocksucker!"- The usual suspects.
80π 9π
ClichΓΒ©d triple-insult, used when an object is sought after by multiple parties and time is of the esscence.
GUY 1:"Give me the keys you fucking cocksucker!"
GUY 2: "Give me the keys you fuckin' cocksucker motherfucker motherfucker!"
COP: "Knock it off!"
GUY 3: "Gi'e thi ke' y' f'in' c'suck'"
COP: "In english..."
GUY 3: "whata fuck? kbgdjgkjdgj Gi'e thi ke' y' f'in' c'suck'"
GUY 4: "Give me the keys you fuckin' cocksucker."
GUY 5: "Give ME the keys you fucking cocksucker."
27π 34π
the ku klux klan or kkk.
A white power group that petitioned to stop changes allowing non-whites to become free americans. Obviously, they failed. Membership has been in decline since they pledged alleigance to hitler in the thirties. Today caricatured by being retarded hicks with shotguns and rusty fords
People in the klan have names like cleetus and billy-bob
160π 95π
(Phrase) I won't be satisfied until I see it for myself.
See also doubting thomas, faggot
22π 11π
The Enigma was an electro-mechanical rotor cypher machine used for both encryption and decryption, widely used in various forms in Europe from the early 1920s on. It is most famous for having been adopted by most German military forces from about 1930 on. Ease of use and the supposedly unbreakable cypher were the main reasons for its widespread use. The cypher was in fact broken, and the reading of information in the messages it didn't protect is generally credited with ending World War II at least a year earlier than it would have otherwise.
The British encryption machine, Typex, and several American ones, eg the SIGABA or M-134-C, were similar in principle to Enigma, but far more secure. The first modern rotor cypher machine, by Edward Hebern, was considerably less secure, a fact noted by William F. Friedman when it was offered to the US Government.
74π 66π