Scrape/ Shotgun is a game.
-Vocabulary:
• A "scrape" refers to the action of taking the bottom of your hand and dragging it skin to skin across the back of someone's neck to create a slight burning sensation on their neck due to the friction.
• "Shotgun" refers to the word you must say to prevent being "scraped".
-Rules of the Scrape/ Shotgun:
•When you say or do something that is regarded as dumb, clumsy, forgetful, contradicting, or anything along those lines, a person involved in the game can say "Scrape!", "That's a scrape!", or "Scrape on you!". At that point you accept the "scrape" and allow him to drag his hand across the back of your neck as described above in the vocabulary section.
•HOWEVER, if you say "Shotgun!" before someone calls a "scrape", then you are safe from the scrape and can not receive one for that time.
•If someone calls a "scrape" on you for something that was not a "scrape", then you are allowed to call a scrape on them for incorrect use of the game.
Example 1 of Scrape/ Shotgun -
Me: Have you seen my phone? I've been looking everywhere for it and can't find it for the life of me!
Friend: SCRAPE!! You're holding your phone in your hand.
Me: Fuck. Alright scrape me, let's get it over with.
Example 2- Me: *Drops my phone* Shotgun!
Friend: You're damn lucky you called shotgun before I called scrape. I'll get you next time.
a peer pressure blowjob or a blowjob under pressure, turns to a agressive "pumping action" in pressure situation
she gave me a shotgun headjob in the front seat while here parents sat right on the porch!!
her old man was comin up the drive she started pumping my cock in her mouth like a shotgun !
To shotgun two beer cans at once. You poke a hole in the bottom of both beer cans, open the top, and drink them as fast as possible without a break.
In reference to COD where you have two guns at once.
Also a reference to the street fighter Kimbo Slice.
You must yell, Akimbo!
After a night of drinking, William and Jack yelled Akimbo as they "akimbo shotgun" both beers at once!
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The act of ejaculating into a womans anus and then having said woman flatulate on a given area. i. e. face, chest, penis, stomach, ect.
A man is flirting with a young girl and decides to take her home and try the Tennessee Shotgun. He then cums up her rectum and she blows it upon his lovely face.
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When you have to poop so bad, when you sit on the toilet, all your crap shoots out of your butthole like a shotgun. Somtimes happens when your sick and you have diarrea.
Dude 1 - "Dude i just took a shotgun dump"
Dude 2 - "Are you sick?"
Dude 1 - "Naw, i just had to go real bad"
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stagecoach guards rode shotgun - they just didn't call it that in the 1880s, as far as anyone has yet discovered. The term "riding shotgun" to refer to the guard sitting next to the driver doesn't emerge from the Old West but rather from movies and TV shows about the Old West. To date no one has found a cite for "riding shotgun" during the time stagecoaches were actually used.
The earliest usage we've found in pulp fiction occurs in the March 27, 1921 issue of the Washington Post's "Magazine of Fiction," in a story entitled "The Fighting Fool" by Dane Coolidge.(See Examples)
In the classic 1939 movie Stagecoach: Curly, the sheriff, says, "I'm gonna ride shotgun," and John Wayne expresses surprise at seeing him in fact riding shotgun later. So we have references from pulp fiction and from the movies (but not from the Old West itself) using the term "riding shotgun" to refer to the stagecoach guard.
Stagecoach revived interest in westerns as a movie genre; in the 1950s they became a staple of television, too. Not surprisingly, catchphrases from westerns soon found their way into everyday speech.
So when does "riding shotgun" get transferred from stagecoach to automobile? The Dictionary of Americanisms (1951) doesn't mention "riding shotgun." We're not sure whether absence of a phrase is evidence, but it's certainly indicative. The first usage in print relating to automobiles, is - ready? - 1954. Dropping "riding" and using the simple "shotgun" (as in "I call shotgun") to mean the passenger seat comes in the early 60s.
Thus, the sequence seems to be that the usage "shotgun guard" on a stagecoach in the Old West (say, the 1880s) evolved to "riding shotgun" in popular fiction about the Old West in the 1920s and 1930s, from there made its way into movies and television, was applied to automobiles in the 1950s, and finally was shortened to "shotgun" in the 1960s.
The term "shotgun" is also used colloquially to indicate an act performed under duress, as though at gunpoint. In the 1880s we read of "elections held under the shotgun system" and in 1903 we find the first reference to "shotgun wedding," which suggests a pregnant bride and a nervous groom getting hitched at the insistence of a shotgun-wielding father. Today we use shotgun wedding figuratively, but one suspects it may have been meant literally in 1903.
"Lum Martin!" shouted McMonagle, owner of the Cow Ranch saloon, waving his finger in front of Benson's face, "that's the man - Lum Martin! He's ridin' shotgun for Wells Fargo - or was until last week - and he's over in my saloon right now, playin' solitaire!"
Call shotgun in this case was seating in the couchguard seat with a shotgun.
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