1) The act of ejaculating, usually in a celebratory fashion.
2) The product of ejaculation.
Not to be mistaken for Touchรฉ (too-shay)
Touche (Pronounced 'toosh')
I would show you my test grade, but I touched all over it when I saw it.
Oh my god, this food is making me touche.
Have you cleaned all the touche off your walls yet?
16๐ 10๐
when a girl and boy love fondling eachothers butts
me and my boyfriend toosh boosh everynight then we make sweet sweet love
1๐ 6๐
Look at that infected vagina, thats a blue fan toosh.
a fan toosh is usually a word to describe a child raised by a gay couple. Hey, look, its that kid with two dads. Hes such a fan toosh
2๐ 18๐
the act of pushing your arm up someones or (your own) doup, reeming it so far up the jobby canal that your whole forearm becomes immersed in the fecal flume, caked in there (or your) very own bum mustard leaving you with what looks like sun tan from being out in the sun for too long wearing a t-shirt known as "tinky tan"
Aww for fuck sake!.. I was really wanting a tan today but look its pissin it down!.. RITE!, FUCK IT!. Here min, bend over... WHY?.. because am away to reem your poopchute to give masel fake bake.. why get baked when I can get CAKED!"
toosh push tinky tan jobby canal
4๐ 6๐
toosh(adj.): an uncool person, flake, fake, or poser; biggest loser on the planet.
toosh(verb): to act uncool or screw something up by be being stupid/uncool; to push one's luck and fail miserably w/great shame; to flake out.
Fabio is a toosh.
GW Bush really tooshed it w/ the war on Iraq.
A cute fuzzy animal that likes to snuggle.
Now there is a snoogle toosh that is being very lazy on the bed.
The five essays that form this collection are the result of extensive desk and field research carried out in nine countries: Bangladesh, India, Nepal; Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey; Liberia; Niger; and the Philippines. The essays are part of a project by Save The Childrenโs Humanitarian Affairs Team, in partnership with the Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute at the University of Manchester, and analyse understandings of humanitarian effectiveness in different geographical, social and cultural contexts and their influence on how particular responses are shaped and assessed.
The researchers used desk reviews, semi-structured and unstructured interviews with informants in capitals and field locations, focus groups with communities, and observation. Researchers sought to ensure appropriate representation of relevant communities (affected people, humanitarian workers, local officials, etc.) and organisations (international, local, UN agencies, Red Cross, NGOs, governments, etc.). The purpose of the interviews, focus groups, and the project as a whole was explained in advance to informants, with the guarantee that their contribution would remain anonymous.