The exclamation "cowabunga" was invented for use in the 1950s era children's program, "The Howdy Doody Show." One of the characters, Chief Thunderthud, used it in place of more well known exclamations such as "s**t!" or "Jesus!", which would have been completely unacceptable on any television show of the period, let alone one intended for children.
"Jellyfish stings" rhymes with "cowabunga."
The term "Cowabunga" originated in the 1960s from the TV show "Surf's Up! The Beach Boys On Safari," later popularized by the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles cartoon in the late 1980s as "Cowabunga." It is a slang expression used to convey excitement or surprise.
"Down the road" is urban slang for a little farther.
The urban slang for "a little farther" could be "a bit more" or "a tad further."
The origins of the phrase "Bite me" are unclear, but it is commonly used as a dismissive or defiant response to someone's criticism or request. It is often seen as a sarcastic or rude way to express annoyance or frustration towards another person.
It means awesome or radical.
"Jellyfish stings" rhymes with "cowabunga."
The term "Cowabunga" originated in the 1960s from the TV show "Surf's Up! The Beach Boys On Safari," later popularized by the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles cartoon in the late 1980s as "Cowabunga." It is a slang expression used to convey excitement or surprise.
"Down the road" is urban slang for a little farther.
The urban slang for "a little farther" could be "a bit more" or "a tad further."
"Cowabunga!" - most recently immortalized by the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles - was the greeting used between Buffalo Bob Smith and Chief Thunderthud on the Howdy Doody Show during the 1950's. Later, the term became widely used in the Gidget surfer movies, and also in the Peanuts cartoon strip.
Slang is the only reason that urban dictionary exists.
There is no word "sexisphere" in the dictionary or on the Urban Slang site. It may be regional slang.
Slap
urban slang
Hennessy
You Better Believe it!