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dutch coffin

When one farts in a coffin before it is closed.

Matt dutch coffined Danny at his open casket so that he could take that stink with him to the grave

by OC Brownbomber September 28, 2010


Kush coffin

To put yourself into the deepest of Kush comas

last night I put myself in a Kush coffin

by Guar2 March 22, 2015


coffin dance

the dancing dudes pulled up grabbed huge chickens coffin and startin dancing with Aaron Smith

that was a sick coffin dance

by ilikememesandcars April 24, 2020

44๐Ÿ‘ 7๐Ÿ‘Ž


coffin nail

Anything that contributes to an early death, particularly....

(N.) Cigarette, usage pre-world war I and still continuing today.

"Whip me a pack of coffin nails to put me to a premature death"

by Kung-Fu Jesus June 21, 2004

166๐Ÿ‘ 38๐Ÿ‘Ž


coffin dance

the upbeat tik tok music that everyone listens to

wait- coffin = dead = silence.
coffin dance - upbeat!?
like if you thought this

coffin dance is a bunch of officials carrying a coffin

by hhstar moonlight May 27, 2020

14๐Ÿ‘ 1๐Ÿ‘Ž


robbing the coffin

Having a relationship with someone who is considerably older than one's self, sometimes in an effort to gain from life insurance policies of the nearly deceased.

Becky's boyfriend is 78 years old. She is robbing the coffin.

by A Concerned Citizen July 12, 2004

26๐Ÿ‘ 4๐Ÿ‘Ž


Iron Coffin

Iron Coffin was a rueful term coined by German submarine ("U-boot" or "U-boat") crews to describe their vessels during World War II. This term reflected the submariners' awareness that submarines are usually sunk while they are submerged, so that the crew of a sunken submarine is interred forever in the hull at the bottom of the sea.

The term is descriptive and makes the desired point, although during the war submarines were made of steel, not iron.

The truth of the term is evident in the fact that between 28,000 and 39,000 U-boat men died in the War, representing a casualty rate between 75% and 90%. The lesser number is most often quoted. The wide difference in estimates may result from the fact that many U-boat men died in air attacks while ashore, or were killed after being re-assigned to Army units during the last months of the conflict.

In the early 1970s the term gained some familiarity among English speakers after the publication of a memoir of the same name written by Herbert Werner, a former U-boat commander.

When a submarine sinks, it becomes an iron coffin.

by Walking Point May 1, 2009

12๐Ÿ‘ 1๐Ÿ‘Ž