When you’re dripping too hard and someone gets offended
*Tay walks in wearing head to toe givenchy
Bryson: bruh is all of that givenchy really necessary?! I swear, you blow yo money on the dumbest things!
Tay: aye, too much drip gon make you slip.
They are the cousins to people who take a bite out of the whole kit kat bar andnot just break a stick off. Also i know alot of people do this and will get this taken down but just be honest and let me post thanks.
People who make definitions to names on urban dictionary are subscribed to T-series
October 13 is National make your dad buy you starbucks day! a national holiday that is fun for all kids and teens...
Hey Billy!
Hey Sarah!
Did you know today is national make your dad buy you starbucks day?-Billy
I did not! Thanks for telling me! I am going to make my dad buy it for me right now!-sarah
a playful threat of domestic violence
Girlfriend: Babe, will you rub my feet?
Boyfriend: No, stop asking me, bitch! Don't make me go Chris Brown on you...
So much of our current social and political discourse is based on proving the other wrong i.e. winning the argument. We don't demonstrate enough empathy to understand where the "other" is coming from and the merits of their point. A black and white world is a construct of our own imagination and our desire to imprint our views on to others. It ignores the beauty that the synthesis or fusion of diverse ideas enables.
John had made a life out of proving people wrong. He took pride in being able to argue against any position and win. He was a talk show host. One night when he was grilling a guest who was making a point around having improved gun controls in place. John, barely let she finish her sentences, was adversarial and was not listening. At the end of the segment the guest said; "John, do you want to win the argument, or make a difference".
Once upon a time there was Glucose,
Our human bodies can burn it or store it.
The End
Hey man, that which does not fuel us, makes us fatter.
Hey man, if it don't fuel you, it makes you fatter.
(noun): A saying dating back to medieval Europe (apx 1100 C.E.). Originally meant to denote one fishmonger's unwillingness to copy his competitor's sign (and thus claim that he sold the same kind of fish), the saying has come to refer to any general unwillingness to copy someone else's work, specifically when requested to do so by a customer.
"I was wondering if you could make me some copies of this licensed product."
"Sorry but they own the rights to it. We can't just make someone else's fish!"