Random
Source Code

Brother from another Mother

A brother that is only related to you through your father, as in he is your half brother, there fore he is your brother but from another mother.

John and I are brothers, but since he is the son of my step-mom he is my brother from another mother

by Wackamoleman September 17, 2009

95๐Ÿ‘ 375๐Ÿ‘Ž


another mule is kicking in your stall

Adultery:
Your significant other is having sex with someone else.

In Muddy Waters "Long Distant Call" or in Koko Taylor "Evil" The line Another Mule is Kicking in Your Stall refers to being cheated on.

by Prince of Pugatory May 29, 2011

37๐Ÿ‘ 3๐Ÿ‘Ž


Brother from another Mother

When your father has a bastard son from another woman, the son becomes your "Brother from another Mother".

So, my father knocked down your mom, that makes you my "Brother from another Mother"

by Randomsniper May 6, 2022

1๐Ÿ‘ 2๐Ÿ‘Ž


hijto from another pito

A play on "brother from another mother" in spanish which translated means "son from another penis".

Joe's and his brother John have the same momma but different fathers making Joe a Hijto from another pito.

by p-ro August 2, 2019

1๐Ÿ‘ 1๐Ÿ‘Ž


rip him another asshole

to rib the fuck outta someone. to embarrass them so bad they shit themselves. him can be anyone not just a guy.

I swear to god iโ€™m going to rip him another asshole lol.

by mdadddedldydnd February 28, 2018

2๐Ÿ‘ 1๐Ÿ‘Ž


Flipping Another Man's Meat

An expression made famous (and controversial) by Heineken and their openly gay spokesperson, Neil Patrick Harris, which pokes fun at the sanctity of a man's barbecue and (presumably) his heterosexuality.

According to Neil Patrick Harris, Heineken Light "makes it OK to flip another man's meat" to which the griller replies that no man can do that. (Should include syntactical variations of 'Flipping Another Man's Meat'.)

by JohnnyApocalypse October 26, 2016

1๐Ÿ‘ 1๐Ÿ‘Ž


Six of one half a dozen of another

It means that 6 of something is exactly the same as half a dozen of another. An analogy used to say what your doing isn't different then something else. Also used for objects or many other things that are similar or the same.

Sally: Its half past two.
Joe: Don't you mean 2:30
Sally: Six of one half a dozen of another.

by Actressgurl11 October 3, 2009

23๐Ÿ‘ 3๐Ÿ‘Ž