Showing someone pictures on Facebook that they are not supposed to see by copying the image location and sending the said person the link.
To creeper copy:
Right click image, select "copy image location", then paste into conversation.
Person 1: LOL! Dude have you seen those pictures from Stacy's party that she put on Facebook?
Person 2: No, I can't see it because we aren't friends. :/
Person 1: Hold on a second, let me Creeper Copy it. They are so bad!
Person 1: *pasted link*
Person 1: LOL!
Person 2: OH MY GOD! hahahahahahahaha! That is legit!
24π 4π
Derogatory (and ironically used) term used in advertising to describe copy writers. A derivative of the term 'mac monkey' used to describe artworkers or graphic designers working on the designers choice of equipment the Apple Mac.
Also copy monkey can sometimes be known as someone who works in a copy shop although this is unconfirmed.
To some copywriters this is extrememly insulting when used not in conjunction with 'creative'.
"Now that's the creative sorted, let's give it to the copy monkey"
15π 2π
A Roblox girl that has toxic behaviour. Usually has the man pack combined with the woman pack and /e dances on the slenders
Copy and Paster: hey 6addy
copy-block \ kop-ee blok \ , verb;
the act of sending a print job to the copier so large that it "blocks" others from printing to that machine temporarily
Jim always seems to copy-block his colleagues by sending large documents to the network printer.
What a homeless man in NYC would scream at you when you and your mom donβt give him money and your Aunt Laurie takes it to heart
Homeless man : *holds out hand*
Mom : *looks at hand & looks away*
Daughter: *looks at hand & looks away*
Homeless man: COPY THINKERS *mutters angrily*
Aunt Laurie: *mutters extra angrily*
A printed-on-paper version of what you see on a computer screen, used mostly in a business sense, such as with spreadsheets, forms, or invoices.
23π 5π
Military slang meaning: "I've received and understood your message in it's entirely".
Contrasts with "No Copy", a phrase used when a message was partially or fully lost. Originally came as a response to the phrase "How Copy?", a term a transmitter asks a recipient to find out if their message has been properly relayed. It has since slipped into the military colloquial.
1Lt Martin: "I need you present at 1615 tomorrow to discuss our new operations orders."
1Lt Daniels: "Good copy."
10π 1π