Country Dictionary

A fork of Rural Dictionary

Housie

Your housemate. In kind with noobie/newbie (a new comer to something); matey/matie (a friend) et al.

My Housie is a Newbie.

by Chorna January 02, 2007

Kitah Beh

Literally means "what, you" in coloquial bengali, in the context of "whuttup". Used with specific over-exageration of English pronounciation for a humourous effect.

A: "Yo..." B: "Kitah beh..." A: Heh... not much.

by Chorna May 07, 2006

buchos ni

Literally means "understand, did" and used in informal context to verify if someone understood you. Pronounced (for humours effect) "boo'chose-knee"

A: I missed the bus. B: Why? A: Because the driver was retarded and didn't wait for me - buchos ni? Or: A: I'm gonna be late, buchos ni? B: Heh... alright.

by Chorna May 07, 2006

agoon

Hindi/Bengali for "fire". Used in replacement of English equivilent for humourous effect. Emphasise the "Goon" for full effect

A: Haha... that was funny, man. B: Oh man... I'm on agoon tonight.

by Chorna May 07, 2006