No. It was said by John Bender [Judd Nelson's character] in The Breakfast Club in 1985 years before it was heard in the second episode, 1990's Bart the Genius
Eat My Shorts!
Bart Simpson obvliously eats his Shorts for Breakfast.
"Get bent""Eat my shorts""Ayy Caramba""You didn't see me do it! You can't prove anything."Probably none...we said "eat my shorts" in the early 70s. He merely used TV to get expressions people were already using in one area to others.It's Eat My Shorts.
Homer Simpson's most popular quote, which he uses the most is, "D'oh!" . He says then when he is frustrated, mad, or feels like a dimwit. He is also known for saying, "Why you little..." at Bart when he is mad.
No.He says Ay Caramba.
Eat My Shorts!
Bart Simpson obvliously eats his Shorts for Breakfast.
Bart
Electro Magnetic Shock (Medical) Eat My Shorts (Bart Simpson)
Yes.
Yes.
"Bracas meas vescimini" means "eat my shorts," as Bart might say to Cicero. Others say it means eat my pants. Bracas (often misspelled braccae) means "trousers." "Meas" qualifies "bracas" and means "my." Vescimini is the imperative plural of the deponent verb vescor (to eat).
"Get bent""Eat my shorts""Ayy Caramba""You didn't see me do it! You can't prove anything."Probably none...we said "eat my shorts" in the early 70s. He merely used TV to get expressions people were already using in one area to others.It's Eat My Shorts.
Homer Simpson's most popular quote, which he uses the most is, "D'oh!" . He says then when he is frustrated, mad, or feels like a dimwit. He is also known for saying, "Why you little..." at Bart when he is mad.
Shorts kaki.
Shorts or pantalones cortos
I would say Bart Simpson