A sneaky round that involves consumption not involving the lads.
You go to the footy with the lads. Tom goes to the toilet and returns with no pies. Jimmy Mac asks "Did you not get the pies in?" Tom replies "They've got no pies left" Jimmy Mac notices pie crumbs round Tom's chops suggesting that Tom did infact have a sneaky pie. This is a monkey round.
That beautiful little brown balloon knot. The sphincter. The anus.
Not to be confused with the Fudge Round which is a snack cake made by Little Debbie, but is equally as satisfying and delicious.
I ate Rachelβs round fudge last night. Her booty juice tastes soooo good.
She let me hit that round fudge last night. Sheβs sore today.
A location where people meet up to discuss plans or have conversations.
"Yo bro lets meet up at the round table later"
7π 1π
To make something round in circumference once again.
Hey this Duravent is damaged ......... It's Ok Aleks i will re-round it.
6π 1π
a ghetto ass town in northern illinois, where white people are the minority and its full of blacks and mexicans.
is this mexico, or round lake? hmm.. i cant tell. oh wait... theres more drugs here than mexico.
119π 67π
Slang invented by GIs during the Korean War and later popularized by Hollywood as a slang used by Asians and Asian Americans to describe the "white man" or Americans of European racial background. The claim that Asians or Asian Americans use this slang to refer to "white" folks is completely without merit. This slang is primarily used by White Americans and never by Asian Americans.
Hey, I bet those Asian girls will go out with us round eyes.
165π 97π
petition passed round for signature
This has nothing to do with the bird. Robin in this expression is a corruption of the French ruban, meaning 'ribbon'.In 17th and 18th century France, there was a good deal for the average peasant to complain about, but complaining to the King in particular was not a good idea. The monarch's usual reaction to a petition from his subjects was to seize the first two or three signers and have them beheaded. Not wishing to lose their heads, but bent nonetheless on petitioning for justice, clever peasants came up with the expedient of signing their names on the petition in a circle, like a ribbon. That way, no one's name came first, and, assuming that there were hundreds of signatures on the petition, it was impractical for the King to punish all the signers. A similar method was adopted by disgruntled sailor in the 18th century British Royal Navy, another institution not known for welcoming criticism. Sailors often signed their names to a petition like the spokes of a wheel, so that no one of them could be considered the leader of a mutiny and hanged.
67π 35π