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hicktown

1. A place where a hick or a redneck lives.

2. A song sung by Jason Aldean.

"We let it rip when we got the money. Let it roll if we got the gas. It gets wild yeah but thatҀ™s the way we get down in a Hicktown"

by Swarsfanatic May 10, 2005

64πŸ‘ 22πŸ‘Ž


Jamie Letourneau

A person who believes himself to be a DJ at JoeFM and also believes himself to be an AIM Mod. He lives in Edmonton, Alberta and has terriable grammar and tends to luiz much of the time.

Person: Jamie Lerourneau ^+^
Jamie: person ^+^
Jamie: I almost twisted my ankle today
Jamie: and almost sprained it
Jamie: was so close

by Swarsfanatic April 23, 2005

8πŸ‘ 2πŸ‘Ž


Roughneck

Noun

Most commonly known as a member of the crew of an oil rig other than the driller. It can also mean cruel and brutal person.

Toby Keith used to be a roughneck, his father was also one.

by Swarsfanatic June 1, 2005

362πŸ‘ 152πŸ‘Ž


Shine

1. A shortened term for moonshine or whiskey.
2. To give off or reflect light.
3. To excel in something.
4. A shortened term for shoeshine.
5. A disparaging term used for a person of the African race.

The game will be held rain or shine.

The police have a warrant to search for shine here.

by Swarsfanatic June 1, 2005

381πŸ‘ 250πŸ‘Ž


juke

1. A roadside or rural establishment offering liquor, dancing, and often gambling and prostitution. Also know as a juke house or juke joint.

2. African-American word meaning a roadside drinking establishment that offers cheap drinks, food, and music for dancing and often doubles as a whorehouse.

Person 1: Where are you going tonight?

Person 2: Down to the juke.

by Swarsfanatic June 26, 2005

17πŸ‘ 36πŸ‘Ž


bad cloud

another word fot a thunderstorm.

A bad cloud is coming this afternoon.

by Swarsfanatic May 11, 2005

4πŸ‘ 5πŸ‘Ž


truck pull

Where, tractor pulling happens. Much like a tractor pull. A motor sport, where the idea is to pull a weight transfer machine, called a sled, as far as possible down a dirt track. The farther down the track the more weight the sled transfers to the skid plate. This makes the sled harder to pull down the track. The more distance, the harder it is to pull it. As the vehicle pulls the sled down the track, the weight moves forward, creating more resistance for the truck to pull against. Finally at the supreme moment of pull, the weight on the sled is directly over the front end of the sled. This causes enormous friction with the ground, which finally brings the vehicle to a halt, with the distance the vehicle has traveled measured from a point called a starting line to the point at which the front of the sled now rests. Pulling the entire length of the track is considered a full pull. When two or more competitors, in the same class, cross the 300 foot line this results in a pull-off.

We're headed down to the truck pull, want to come?

by Swarsfanatic June 1, 2005

45πŸ‘ 8πŸ‘Ž