A song that my parents would sing to me when I was like 3 to get me to be quiet.
2 year old me: WAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHH!
My dad: Ryan Ryan, why you crying? Ryan Ryan, sounds like you're dying. Ryan Ryan, change your butt now! Ding ding ding ding ding!
~silence~
As early as the 18th century, a drunkard was "as full as a cannon" or even a howitzer, alluding to the enormous mass of explosive charge contained in such a gun. It was only in the course of the 19th century that the howitzer was added as a reinforcement of this idiom.
Look at her, she is full like a howitzer...
In the process of leaving a location.
It's 5:00 - I'm outie like a baby's navel.
A pre-phrase to a stated verb (action) most commonly affiliated between two close acquaintances.
-“YO D. O. DOUBLE G! THEY COMIN’!! WE NEED’A MAKE LIKE TWO AND SPLIT!!”
-“Hey baby, let’s make like two do, and get it ooooonnnn(;”
-“ I'm stuck on you
Whoa-oh, whoa-oh
Stuck like glue
You and me, baby, we're stuck like glue
Whoa-oh, whoa-oh
Let’s make like two
You and me, baby, we're stuck like glue” -sugarland
The meaning comes from a theoretical question. What if hitler didn’t get rejected from art school
Would he become the next Picasso
Therefore instead of saying “I like it Picasso”
You say. I like it hitler
Daniel: do you like my new car
Bailey : I like it hitler
On Facebook, there are a certain few people who tend to "like" your statuses and photos, regardless of what they are. In return, you sometimes "like" their statuses and photos back as a way of saying thanks for their contributions. This creates a circle of liking that goes both ways and can eventually expand to earn you even more "likes" on your future updates.
Bro 1: "Dude, why did you like that picture?"
Bro 2: " Chill broski, she's in my like circle, it's all good."