To Fuck A Girl Just Mins. After Breaking Up With You Girlfriend.
To Fuck A Girl While Dating Another Girl.
Josh Pulled A Brock When He Fucked Kasey Tonight.
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broooo, i got totally brock roostered last night at the party
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a very small and thin penis, always comparable to a McDonalds French fry,I brock dick is skinny enought to fit inside a pencil sharpener.
Wow that boy has a brock dick, that thing is smaller than my finger.
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A person of worthy and gentlemanly character and attributes, who OVER-INDULGES into the alcohol and upon doing so tends to accidentally, intentionally, wilfully, recklessly, and wholly SPILL either his own drink, a drink being poured, a drink about to be poured, someone else's drink (not necessarily at the same table or same group of friends), or in the alternative, telekinetically spill his own drink, a drink being poured, a drink about to be poured, someone else's drink (not necessarily at the same table or same group of friends), either onto the floor, table, shirt, crotch, pants, dress, or any other substance comprised of matter known to man, and upon the finishing of this act(s), a person, or a group of people, beller and/or yell out the phrase, sometimes repeatedly to the detriment and celebration of said person "SpilLy BroCK...SPilLy BroCK!"
Oh man, I totally saw a Spilly Brock at the bar last week
~ or ~
I was sitting across from a Spilly Brock and everything got soaked
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A really big, cheeseburger eating motherfucker.
Did you see that dude Isaac Brock? Gawddamn he is a fat fucker.
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EAST MIDLANDS DIALECT slang. both verb and adjective. Brock means broken.
Similarly, Breck is a verb which means to break something.
Brock can be substituted by the word "Bost" (burst) when referring to balloons, tyres or milk cartons etc
But, Breck or Brock are not used generally when referring to having a break from something or using the brakes on a vehicle, these similar sounding words are always said in their original English form eg. 'I'm having five minutes break' or 'slow down and put your brakes on'
East Midlands dialect is very diluted in modern speech and to a large extent, is dying out, so these words are considered 'common' sounding nowadays. A lot of words spoken in the E.Mids region of England have Danish origins. The author D H Lawrence, himself an Eastwood man would have been very familiar with the word 'brock' and its use in the vernacular.
1. CONVERSATION OVERHEARD IN AN ILKESTON PUB : "I bought me son one of them there new smart phones for his birthday...he's only had it five minutes and brock it already.
so, I took it back to Argos and they asked me what were up with it an I said "I dunno its brock, it needs mendin".
They said: who brock it d'you know?
I tode em tharradint.
They said "Did you breck it?"
I said "I dint breck it, I oppened the box and it were already brock"
they said orate, and that thid gerrus a new un out the back, but I thought He'd only goo an breck that one an all, so I gorrim a telly instead, but now he's got munk-on cos he wanted a phone."
2. A SIMILAR CONVERSATION: "I seen a fate on Ilson Market last nate...two pissed-up blokes knockin seven bells a shit out each other...Ones ot his swede the other brock his nose. Coppers ad to breck it up. They shook 'ands on it though after and watched two boilers scrappin over their handbags"
3. MAN BOASTING OF HIS DESTRUCTIVE POWERS: " When I breck sommat, it stays brock."
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a very unattractive male that has no balls and would no take a blow job from a girl
You a brock stanley
(means your gay)
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