A powerful weapon of mass destruction used by the Soviets during the battle of Pepe where the radical meme group JOE got asked who joe is witch led to the death of 69 civilians and 420 injuries. The Soviets used the weapon after their motherland was called gay. JOE quickly surrendered but the Soviets had to give up the use after the U.N's ban, due to the increased threat of sanctions and their economy starting to run dry.
Why did I waste my time, was this worth it?
The Uno reverse card killed thousands of blind crippled retarded orphans.
THE MOST POWERFUL THING IN THE GALAXY
Human 1:you are cute
Human 2: *uno reverse card*
Human 1:...that's not true
Human 2: you can't say anything about it UwU
The act of shoving a loaded shotgun up your ass and pulling the trigger.
Damn, that dude had some problems, you hear he did a Reverse Kurt Cobain?
Instead of putting a round of buckshot in your head like a bitch, you take it up the ass like a man. (Shoot yourself in the ass with a shotgun)
Person 1: My Uncle commited suicide a couple days ago. I don't know what to do..
Person 2: Oh I'm so sorry, how'd he go?
1: The Reverse Kurt Cobain.
To "Reverse Swamp Donkey" is very similar to "Swamp Donkey," the only real difference is the gender roles. In a Reverse Swamp Donkey, a horny male gets a girl plastered, while the male stays sober, but pretends to be drunk. Once the girl is nearing blackout, the male takes her upstairs and has shameful sex with her.
"Dude, did you guys hear about Stuart? I guess he swamp donkeyed some girl last night."
"Bro, only chicks can swamp donkey."
"Then Stuart reverse swamp donkeyed her! That slimey sack of shit!"
A man with well defined, possibly protruding abs. Instead of a shell on his back, he has a "shell" on his stomach.
That guy has done so many sit ups he's become a reverse ninja turtle.
This obscure reference refers to the eating of (at least) two corndogs in one sitting. The etymology breakdown is somewhat apocryphal, but essentially is from the latin 'evictus', which has one of the meanings of 'overcome and expel'. Corndogs, by their very nature are non-trivial to process both culinarily and digestively. Shut up Jim! It's not funny!
From www.etymonline.com
evict (v.)
mid-15c., "recover (property) by judicial means," from Latin evictus, past participle of evincere "overcome and expel, conquer, subdue, vanquish; prevail over; supplant," from assimilated form of ex- "out," or perhaps here merely intensive (see ex-) + vincere "conquer" (see victor). Sense of "expel by legal process" first recorded in English 1530s, from a post-classical sense of the Latin word. Related: Evicted; evicting. Compare evince.
Hey Nic, what's for lunch?
The same ol' reverse double eviction.