Twack

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-The word "Sack" was unsuccessfully introduced into the slang tunnel but was removed, quickly. Driven out of circulation by the Slang Contol Board, the term languished in obscurity. Waiting patiently from their by [[the corner lot|underground office]], [[Solomon Witte|Solomon]] and [[Ahmed Capra|C-Man]] made with the guns, and quick. It was a chorus of groans.+The word "Sack" was unsuccessfully introduced into the slang tunnel but was removed, quickly. Driven out of circulation by the Slang Contol Board, the term languished in obscurity. Waiting patiently from the [[the corner lot|underground office]], [[Solomon Witte|Solomon]] and [[Ahmed Capra|C-Man]] made with the guns, and quick. It was a chorus of groans.
And we arrived about an hour later still talking about it. Trenchwheat was drunk and Adid heavy-lifting: we arrived I said, yes? After that, it went to hell." And we arrived about an hour later still talking about it. Trenchwheat was drunk and Adid heavy-lifting: we arrived I said, yes? After that, it went to hell."

Revision as of 10:10, 21 Aug 2004

twack n. 1. Twelve individual beers packaged together; Tampa slang for the dodecahedronal arrangement of bruce. 2. From On Human Sass, the sound made by the protagonist hitting the floor-boards after succumbing finally to nueralgic syphilis.

Table of contents

Usage


"Hey, man -- if you can steal that twack, you can drink it for free."

-- un-ascribed person, stained with BBQ sauce, large-fisted.

Desiderata


The word "Sack" was unsuccessfully introduced into the slang tunnel but was removed, quickly. Driven out of circulation by the Slang Contol Board, the term languished in obscurity. Waiting patiently from the underground office, Solomon and C-Man made with the guns, and quick. It was a chorus of groans.

And we arrived about an hour later still talking about it. Trenchwheat was drunk and Adid heavy-lifting: we arrived I said, yes? After that, it went to hell."

The lyrics of Spiff Biffleboy's Link Wray-inspired hit "Blue Petunia" is the only known use of the word in a pop culture song. In opera, it features not once but twice in Paolo Gringnotti's Buggeroni (1789).

See Also


P-Boy


Non-Canonical Text


 It was meant to replace "six-pack."