A action sports apparel brand. Created by two dudes from West Texas that are totaly out of their minds, or maybe it's just a Texas thing who knows. Kind of like RVCA no one really knows the meaning behind it but they are dope af.
Larry- Bro what is that dope shit you're wearing?
Jimbo- It's my All Bang No Buck gear bro, if I full send it they're going to sponsor me one day bro!
A skid who claims to coin terms of technologies already in existence and then tries to backpedal into stating something a Fox brings up. Look up "Johnny Shadoe"
Dude, I found the Worthless of all Skids, he goes by "Johnny Shadoe", Trying to recoin Multi Factor Authentication with "Universal 3 Factor Authentication.
American military term from the 1980s that describes someone that is completely disheveled in appearance and/or lacking discipline.
Did you Jackson in formation this morning with no shave, his rank insignia upside-down, and his headgear backwards? He’s all ate up!
Winning albeit something trivial. Reminiscent of the late '80's and early '90's game Don't spill the beans. Or the Jellybean in a jar guessing game. To win all the beans is the equivalent of a pat on the back, winning student of the month in 4th grade and other such victories.
" I told you my dessert would be the best at the potluck!"
"Yup, you win all the beans"
When you type every word in square brackets
Person: "Everything I'm typing is in All square brackets, even the comma and colon and period and quotations."
To be “all yolk” is to be out of the loop, or backwards even.
As we know, historically eggs have egg whites and a yolk. If you’re “all yolk” you’re missing some of the essential cultural or most recent generational knowledge or trends.
Often used as the opposite of “woke”, the term infers that you are not “in the know” or “of the times.”
“Mom use ‘slay’ in a sentence”
“They rode home in a slay?”
“Oh my god mom you’re all yolk”
All Souls' Day, also known as the Commemoration of All the Faithful Departed and the Day of the Dead, is a day of prayer and remembrance for the souls of those who have died, which is observed by Catholics and other Christian denominations annually on November 2.