A country that is also known as Australia to many which was once a penal colony of the British but until today still act like a penal colony as the majority of people there are either convicts or racists.
Penal Colony Down Under should be the new name to refer to this country until they are ready to get their shit together to show kindness to people of different beliefs, races and skin colour.
1. The covid-19 has brought the worst behavior of the people in the Penal Colony Down Under. Asian looking people are targeted for hate crime on a daily basis.
2. The terrorist who murdered everyone in the mosque in Christchurch is from the Penal Colony Down Under. Many people have refused to name him, such should also be applied to his country that now has become the centre of racism in the world.
The act of "support from under a desk" is to receive oral from under a gamers desk,often a PC gamer.
"Hey babe want some support from under the desk"
An idiom which means: to hide something, usually embarrassing, from others.
An example of "sweep something under the rug":
I'm not gonna sweep your mess under the rug, do it yourself!
The White House swept the president's scandal under the rug. past tense
This is what you do when you can't think of any other way to break up with your girlfriend.
I didn't want to hurt Jane's feelings, so I just threw her ass under the bus instead.
1. Use NordVPN
2. Get a tinfoiled hat
3. live under a rock with no internet
As seen in NordVPN Commercial if you not want to use vpn and secure your browsing from hackers then live under a rock with no internet
A saying that relates to astrological signs. A person uses this saying when they believe they are unlucky. There are no 'bad signs' in astrology, but according to legend Capricorn and Scorpio are considered bad signs.
Ferris Bueller: I asked for a car, I got a computer. Hows that for being born under a bad sign?
Keep something a secret.
There are four origins of this idiom (I GUARANTEE IT):
- English archers protected their bows by putting the strings on their heads under their helmets;
- “keep it under our hat” was mentioned in 1982 in periodical "Gleanings in Bee Culture";
- President Abraham Lincoln's stove pipe hat, where he kept important papers;
- the ceremonial swordbearer of the Lord Mayor of London (can be dated to 1420), who keeps the key to the Lord Mayor’s seal of office in a special pocket in his hat.
-keep it under one's hat-
Joey: All right, what else?
Chandler: Well uh, there was acting classes, stage combat classes, tap classes…
Joey: Which we're still keeping under our hats!