A muffin that has been flipped.
An upside down muffin that is retarded and gay.
1. Mom, why is there a flip muffin in the kitchen?
2. Look at Christina, she's such a stupid flip muffin.
The combination of DMT and LSD. Smoking DMT while under the influence of LSD. Effects are confusing, but factory/assembly line-like imagery seems frequently to be a part of the experience.
"Doing the Ikea flip was an interesting experience, but I'm not sure I'm gonna try it again. It's just too weird. Really confusing.
A “flip” is a term generally used to describe a psychedelic in combination with MDMA. For example, a hippie flip is magic mushrooms with MDMA and a Jedi flip is magic mushrooms, LSD, and MDMA.
A Heffter flip is when you take synthetic mescaline with LSD. Mescaline has some attributes that make it similar to MDMA when combined with LSD, but also produces strong psychedelic effects. This is one of the only flips that doesn’t involve MDMA. It’s named after Dr. Heffter’s seminal contribution to the foeld of psychopharmacology, which was the identification of mescaline as the active principle in the peyote cactus.
My friend and I got some synthetic mescaline recently and decided to do a heffter flip while we went hiking. The intensity was incredible, but grounded at the same time.
A Reverse Buddha Flip is where you perform a Loser 180
Dave: You guys know I can Buddha Flip
Dave looks proud
Bunny: Watch this!
Bunny does a Reverse Buddha Flip
Dave: Damn that looks so cool.
Dave is in awe.
The act of taking a recorded audio sample from a existing source (often not made by the individual) to remix it into a new song, by either sampling drums, a tonal instrument, or any sounds. Some techniques of sample flipping are looping, chopping/micro-chopping, scratching, various speed, and instrument Isolation. Sample flipping comes from early experimental genres such as Musique concrète, Sound Collage, Turntable Music, Electroacoustic and early Electronic music.
You have to have skills to be able to Sample flip just 5 second of a song.
This indicates that the speaker is going to change their mind about something. This phrasing is preferred by software engineers.
I thought I wanted to work here, but James is hard to work with, so I might flip my bit.