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Hoe Bucket

a bucket o' hoes

Joe: Hey, what do you want to do tonight?
Steve: Lets go grab ourselves a hoe bucket.
Joe: HOES!!!

by Meathammer and Thongbreaker April 9, 2009

31πŸ‘ 20πŸ‘Ž


bucket head

One who's head will not properly hold a hat because it is forced upward, due to their conical shape.

Matt Antolin has a bucket head.

by Dal Engineer March 24, 2005

76πŸ‘ 58πŸ‘Ž


bucket flange

An overly loose vagina. like the one your mum has. all saggy and flappy commonly known to hang around the ankles.

"flip flop flap" that's her bucket flange slapping against the inside of her knees

by Hey January 11, 2004

15πŸ‘ 8πŸ‘Ž


Crust Bucket

Someone that hasn't wiped there butt in a while.

That person is a crust bucket.

Whats up crust bucket.

by TonyL January 16, 2006

35πŸ‘ 24πŸ‘Ž


Bucket

An adjective dscribing something EXTREMELY bad.

Sean can't pick up chicks becasue his pimp-game is totally bucket.

by CooperStar January 22, 2009

1πŸ‘ 8πŸ‘Ž


muskie bucket

Southeastern Ohio has some truly amazing things and the following provides some of our strongest documentation! The Big Muskie Bucket is the centerpiece of Miner’s Memorial Park located just 16 miles West of Caldwell I-77 Exit 25 and right along SR 78. This artifact has generated unbelievable interest from young and old all across the United States and from around the world! Why?

The Big Muskie was the World’s Largest Dragline and one of the seven engineering wonders of the world! The machine has even been featured on the History Channel! The Bucket weighs 460,000 pounds empty and when loaded carried an additional 640,000 pounds. It’s volume is equal to that of a 12 car garage. Can you imagine what Big Muskie must have been like to even move such an object, let alone maneuver it effectively?

The Big Muskie Bucket and Miner’s Memorial is without a doubt a one-of-a-kind destination. The site represents a major piece of history and assures that the mining men and women of Southeastern Ohio will never be forgotten.

I was driving through ohio and i saw this huge bucket, it was the muskie bucket

by Sharif Lewis-Lambert September 22, 2006

12πŸ‘ 6πŸ‘Ž


kick the bucket

The actual origin of the term is from England, and began in the later middle ages. A corpse would be laid out, and a bucket of holy water placed at its feet. Visitors could then sprinkle the deceased with Holy Water. Other explanations (suicide, execution) came later to explain an idiom, of which the origin of the term had ceased, mainly as a result of the English reformation.

"To Kick the Bucket" is explained by Bishop Abbot Horne in 1949, in his booklet "Relics of Popery" Catholic Truth Society. He adds "Many other explanations of this saying have been given by persons who are unaquainted with Catholic Custom"

by Dr Michael Foster October 3, 2007

150πŸ‘ 128πŸ‘Ž