A phrase used to indicate you have or will aggravate or start a conflict with a said person in power or a group of sort (country, gang etc.)
1: "I've had enough of John and his stupid gang. Come on. Let's kick the hornets nest!"
2: "He has really kicked the hornets nest now!"
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"He took her down to Chinatown and taught her how to kick the gong around"
"I saw ol'' Joe and he was kicking the gong around"
"did you see that kickflip""ha!, more like a kick flop"
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Military term meaning Six months revocation of pay, Six months confinment, and a other than honorable discharge, Bad conduct discharge (see BCD or Big Chicken Dinner).
Cpl. Smith hit the Lt. Colonel. He may be looking at Six Six and a Kick.
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To have a feeling that you need to do something, but then you don't do it, only to find out later that you should have listened to your feeling and done what it told you to.
Suzanne: Hey you all wore your Beatles shirts today! I had a really strong feeling that I needed to wear mine, but I ignored it.
Jenna: You shouldn't kick fate in the balls like that.
A common disorder of chronic avoidance of difficulties accompanied by a flair for procrastination.
Our entire workplace administration seems to share what appears to be a characterological form of chronic Can Kicking Syndrome and so we all wind up lost, trying to solve our own commonly shared dilemmas by ourselves, in isolation.
The phrase 'pumped up kicks' basically means shoes that are very expensive. It could also be taken as it's non-literal term meaning 'the latest and greatest apparel items'.
Did you see John come by? He had some pumped up kicks! What a rich asshole.
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