blee
Found among the Royal Court of Princess Peussie and her sister Princess Fluff, the word BLEE is usually followed by JOHNNY....making it Blee Johnny; this expression of joy only happens when a member of this royal family has had a great bowel evacuation without use of enemas or colonic irrigations!
"Blee Johnny, THAT was a good blow out of my bowels"
or
"Here it comes and I think it's going to be a major BLEE JOHNNY"
or
"Here it comes and I think it's going to be a major BLEE JOHNNY"
blee
Slang term for a blunt (See blunt)
Gimme dat deah weed im finna roll me a blee!!
blee
'blee' is a word which preceeds another explaining 'surprise' , anticipation, sexual anxiety, remorse, extreme stomach gas containment, etc.. Blee may sound like "Believe" shortened to "Bleeeeve in the Lord" but can only be heard in Louisiana.
1) "BLEE, oh damn, that gas is causing me wild stomach pain
2) "Blee that Blee Johnny", heard frequently at the Monkey Cave, Miraflores, Lima, Peru
3) "blee....p.....blee...p" the sound of a horn trying to sound but running on a very weak battery.
2) "Blee that Blee Johnny", heard frequently at the Monkey Cave, Miraflores, Lima, Peru
3) "blee....p.....blee...p" the sound of a horn trying to sound but running on a very weak battery.
blee
head, blowjob, etc
that bitch gives nasty blee.
blee
Used often. . . by me, anyway. . . as an espression of great joy, great exasperation, as a substitute for cursing. . . pretty much an all-purpose term of strong emotion.
Usually a one-word exclamation.
blee
Used in the same context as "ew!", "yuck!" or "gic!"
Girl 1: sooo... do you think he's HAWWT?
Girl 2: NO WAY! Ick! Bleeeeeeeeeeeeee!
Girl 2: NO WAY! Ick! Bleeeeeeeeeeeeee!
blee
A not-entirely onomatopoeic word to describe the act of vomiting, usually as an instantaneous reaction to a piece of particularly unpleasant information.
This word was propagated in the 80's and 90's by the seminal 'Smash Hits' magazine in the UK
The word ends in an indefinite number of e's and exclamation marks, in direct proportion to the disgustingness of the preceding idea.
This word was propagated in the 80's and 90's by the seminal 'Smash Hits' magazine in the UK
The word ends in an indefinite number of e's and exclamation marks, in direct proportion to the disgustingness of the preceding idea.
"Here's a cut-out-'n'-keep picture of Wendy James and her hairy legs. Blee!"
"Oh no. George Michael's about to be sick in his cowboy boots. Bleeeeee!!!"
"Oh no. George Michael's about to be sick in his cowboy boots. Bleeeeee!!!"