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Crack Whore

1. One who will do anything to cling to someone, fails at any attempt to get their OWN life and does not know how to take a hint went someone else is not interested!

2. Someone who has sex for crack.

This guy is such a crack whore when he hangs out with Sherry!

by pimp daddy December 30, 2005

7πŸ‘ 14πŸ‘Ž


goats on crack

see it with acid now

by you drink pp March 29, 2003

8πŸ‘ 17πŸ‘Ž


crack alackin

Not getting any. -(sex)

Question: How's it goin man?
Answer: Crack alackin.

by gigadot August 20, 2007

8πŸ‘ 17πŸ‘Ž


ASS CRACK

the crack of an ass that can veiwed by male or female sex

nik is such an ass crack

by steveo758 February 18, 2008

12πŸ‘ 29πŸ‘Ž


crack sucker

A crack sucker is one who ventures into the crack to give it a good suck.
Crack suckers originated in the early 70's and has been continued on for many centuries and is still widely used today.

Scobie is a crack sucker as he sucks peps crack!

by Joffee July 13, 2004

6πŸ‘ 12πŸ‘Ž


Face Crack

When one becomes utterly addicted to FaceBook.

Face Crack interferes with the way your brain processes chemicals that create feelings of pleasure, so you need more and more of Face Crack just to feel involved. The feeling of panic is common side effect when the Internet can’t be accessed.

People who become addicted to Face Crack will exhibit a state of dependency by checking FaceBook several times a day – The idea of not knowing your friends every thought and/or what their doing at that very minute is the main cause of addiction.

Rich: I am thinking that everyone is addicted to Face Book...

CaCa: I need it. We all need it. U need it. Just admit it dammit! I (state ur name) gotta have Face Crack – I mean FaceBook.

Dawn: You both have a problem - go read a book.

by 1975rufus March 15, 2009

28πŸ‘ 84πŸ‘Ž


craic crack

A mispelling of the word crack. The word originates from the Anglo-Saxon term, "crack" meaning fun.

It possibly dates back as far as Old English or the older Scots dialect and is still used today by Ulster-Scots in northern areas of Ireland.

Borrowed by the Gaelic Irish and spelt "craic", the term has been picked up by UK journalists in recent years and has re-entered the use of the word in mainland UK, however Dublin journalists in the 1970s frequently spelt the word as "crack" in written articles.

What's the crack?
Aye it was good crack!
To craic crack a joke

by G Holliday April 5, 2006

11πŸ‘ 27πŸ‘Ž