the parts of the body usually covered by a bathing suit that are fun to touch
"that girl's bathing suit area smelled like sizzlean"
41π 14π
A scandal so trivial, it can only be compared to the backlash from Barack Obamaβs tan suit.
βHey did you hear about Bidenβs Rolex? Who does he think he is, Trump?β
βNah man, I ignore those tan suit scandals.β
1803π 980π
Any act that makes you feel good, but is unlikely to be noticed by anyone.
See Voting.
Jack: Did you vote yesterday?
Jill: No. Voting is like peeing in a wetsuit - your get a nice warm feeling but nobody really notices.
Jack: Ah, the wet suit syndrome.
20π 6π
To get dressed up to the nines and head out for a night on the town
'Aiite fella, get yourself all Gucci'd up. Tonight we're gonna suit it n' boot it!'
33π 14π
1) A suit which represents "a major break through on the sowing machine".
The mirror ball suit is from the mighty boosh, from the episode the priest and the beast.
2) Mirror ball recently has been used as an insult by calling someone a mirror ball, or saying someone mite as well be one, as all they do it copy everyone else in many different ways.
You mirror ball, stop copying me!
This is the mirror ball (suit) :)
14π 4π
Redhook ballcap, old flannel shirt, worn T-shirt with the Rainer Beer logo, cut-off levi's and work boots laced up half way.
Dude, as I saw the dude in the Seattle Business Suit go to the beer isle, I didn't know what he was gonna get, some micro or dreg, like Schmitt or something, yeay? Then pronto, he bought both.
37π 15π
A tradition in which it is customary to wear a suit on the last Wednesday of each month. The origins of "Wednesday Suit Day" are widely debated: some believe it dates back to 19th Century England when, typically on Wednesdays, Parliament was held and all members were required to dress in formal attire. Others believe the "Wednesday Suit Day" tradition began irrationally in Richmond, VA, when two co-workers agreed upon the last Wednesday of each month being a day suitable for suit wearing. Many agree that "Wednesday Suit Day" finds it's genesis from a high school senior taking fictitious character "Barney"'s command to "Suit Up!" from the American TV series "How I Met Your Mother" a little too seriously. Although the background is undetermined, many people still honor the Wednesday Suit Day tradition today.
"Hey, Logan, what are you wearing to class tomorrow?"
"First off: weird question. Second: it's Wednesday Suit Day, suit up!"