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kicks back "

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      [Verb]  | "kick back" 


      1: to assume a relaxed position or attitude; also : to spend time relaxing : take it easy


      Origin: 1972 ;

      [Verb]  | "kicks back" 


      1: to refrain from labor or exertion;


        * e.g., " ... I plan to spend the day kicking back and watching television "



      •  Antonyms : 

      • (N/A)





      2: to spend time doing nothing;


        * e.g., " ... a good resort for people who want to kick back and watch others exercise strenuously "



      •  Antonyms : 

      • (N/A)





      [Verb]  | "kick back" 


      1: to refrain from labor or exertion;


        * e.g., " ... I plan to spend the day kicking back and watching television "



      •  Antonyms : 

      • (N/A)





      2: to spend time doing nothing;


        * e.g., " ... a good resort for people who want to kick back and watch others exercise strenuously "



      •  Antonyms : 

      • (N/A)





       [ "kick back" ]

      1: small gathering between group of friends, more than a get together, less than a party (used in nor-cal central valley)

        * e.g.,  ... Ill call up a few guys and a few girls over to my house, we'll have a kick back 

       [ "kicking back" ]

      1: what do you do for relaxing

        * e.g.,  ... when you ask someone what he has done for kicking back on weekends or in the holidays. What are you going to do in this holiday for kicking back 

       [ "kick back" ]

      1: Telling some one to calm down or to chill

        * e.g.,  ... listen yo, kick back. 

       [ "kicking back" ]

      1: what do you do for relaxing

        * e.g.,  ... when you ask someone what he has done for kicking back on weekends or in the holidays. What are you going to do in this holiday for kicking back 

       [ "kick back" ]

      1:  Money paid generally to an official for covertly assisting an organization, individual, or initiative.

        * e.g.,  ... The congressman received a ten-percent kick back for supporting the legislation that would give the mining company exclusive rights to the region. 


       [ "kick back" ]

      2:  Recline, as in a reclining chair. "Kick back and put your feet up," which means "Relax!"

       [ "kick back" ]

      1:  Small party to get your perv on (seepervin) n meet a few hoes.

        * e.g.,  ...  I'm juss gna roll ovr 2 brandons 4 a kick back 2 nite. 


       [ "kick back" ]

      2:  A place ur homeboys tell you their going cause they don't want u 2 show up @ the same party as them and get all the bitches.

        * e.g.,  ...  Justin on tha phone with Tony, 

       [ "kick back" ]

      1: Mafia or underworld term for a percentage of a crew's earnings which is earmarked for the Boss or head of a Mafia Family. This involves money earned from an illegal business as well as protection/extortion rackets.

        * e.g.,  ... "Vinnie's gotta kick back 20 points of the racehorse racket to Don Alberto." 

       [ "Kick back" ]

      1: WEED

        * e.g.,  ... “I smoke kick back and think” 

       [ "kick back" ]

      1: being lazy to do a designated task

        * e.g.,  ... don't hire this fool, he kicks back all the time. 

       [ "kicking back" ]

      1: "I thought you'd be kicking back today", in light of the midnight crash between the motorcycle, the go-kart, and two ostriches. (kicking back comes from the Latin ~ Balagopalottoknicker meaning lean back, put your feet on the old balago ottoman, and stick your hand in your shorts) When you "kick back", "kick it back", or "kick it" what you are doing is relaxing. One night, German, Fredrick the Glob threw his legs up on his out of work Cossack butler who was gathering cold klinkers off the floor, while wearing a bear skin coat. Fredrick sighed and said, "GUTTEN KOSAK". A passing Englishman, by the name of John Wasserman (which means man who pass much water from only one beer) thought he had said hassack. Wasserman rushed home to England and threw a sheepskin over a strumpet. Whenever Wasserman was kicking back and havin a cold Leinenkugel's from Bavaria, he would bellow, "HASSACK", and the stumpet came running with the sheepskin blanket. Englishman, David Stool improved on the hassack. Stool was a furniture maker, and began manufacturing a padded piece to match his chairs. Thus was born the Foot Stool. I know this to be English. One night in a London bar filled with the village people, I heard one man say to another, in a very cockney accent, "May I push your stool in." Just a tidbit. In 1650, during the Reformation, English law decreed it illegal to keep strumpets at home any longer. Sales of Foot Stools increased greatly, and David Stool became a Hundredaire.

        * e.g.,  ... Anyhow, back to the meaning of kicking back, if you are sitting at home with your friends doing absolutely nothing, you can say that you are "just kicking it". This expression is considered to be slang and therefore used only in informal contexts. Here are a few examples; *After the exam, my friends and I kicked it at home last night. *Some people complain that most government employees go to the office, just kick it back until they have to go home. *This expression has more or less the same meaning as "chill out". *I have a new foot stool and I'm kicking back tonight with a cold Leinenkugel. 

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