Camber
the alignment angel of a wheel on a car. the angel from the top of the wheel to the bottom. if you have negative camber the top of the wheel is in (towards the car) if you have positive the bottom of the wheel is towards the car.
yo! i just lowered my civic check out the camber, because im a moron and don’t know how to get my car aligned.
a slight convexity (as of the surface of a road)
have you ever noticed that the road to to your mother’s house has a mean camber?
camber is the same as c-mber but more disaparaging word (“gr-ss”)
eat more carrots not this camber
Read Also:
- porngrind
grindcore characterized by s-xual themes, vocals that range from pitchshifted growls to absurdly high-pitched screams, and groove-based riffing. due to p-rnogrind’s often misogynistic and h-m-phobic imagery, many fans of political grindcore detest the subgenre. p-rngrind bands include gut, blood duster and early c-ck and ball torture. the arduous task of looking for decent p-rno to […]
- Detruthel
the opposite of denial, not the truth, wack, crazy. bro, you are in denial nah man, im in detruthel!
- Douchebachery
an action that only a very large douchebag would perform. jessie, i’m so tired fo your douchebachery! seduction from virtue or duty by an abrupt often chastening shock to the nerves, emotions, or awareness. to put douche and debauchery together. that guy jeremy b. is still trying to douchebacherize the ladies with his douchebachery. extreme […]
- doucheroni
macaroni and cheese that is being eaten by a douchebag. also part of a common saying (refer to 2nd example below) that implies that the person being spoken to is acting like a douchebag. 1. look at that douchebag eating his doucheroni. 2. stop eating so much doucheroni!
- Doucherstien
the recently made up word ‘doucherstien’ is an insult. it can be used as a serious insult, or a friendly insult. whatever. the word comes from the root words ‘douche’ and ‘stien’. douche, meaning a squeeze-bottle used for the clensing of bodily orfices (usually the v-g-n- or the -n-s). and stien, meaning a german beer […]