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Meaning of the phrase womp womp in American English? The "womp womp" or "womp womp womp womp" sound affect seems to be part of whatever sound effects and music library is widely used in making lots of the amateur low-budget kids videos on YouTube, and probably ships as part of the standard effects library in some popular video production application
Fail trumpet onomatopoeia - English Language Usage Stack Exchange The name "womp womp" to me conjures up a different sound [not sure where to most easily find it] which smears the first three notes together [it's a trombone after all] – supercat Commented Jun 22, 2018 at 15:16
etymology - What is the origin of cattywampus - English Language . . . Early occurrences of 'catawampus' and its variants in the wild The earliest instance of the spelling catawampus in Elephind search results is from "A Few Days in the Diggings" (an article about the California Gold Rush) in the [Springfield] Illinois Daily Journal (February 24, 1849):
Is there an idiom or typical expression for an unfunny joke? Yet a third approach, sometimes when a joke is just terrible, some people (for example I have a friend who does this all the time) just respond by saying "womp womp" which is meant to reflect the following sound made by a trumpet, tuba, trombone or other such brass instrument: womp womp Which is often a shortened version of this:
Phrase: goes like a rattlesnake? - English Language Usage Stack . . . The intended expression here is probably: shag like a rattlesnake: To copulate energically Sex-Lexis com The corresponding expression used outside BrE is "fucks like a rattlesnake", although I was able to find another example which tones down the language:
Meaning of sex on the legs - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Stack Exchange Network Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers
Whats the origin of the phrase bubble gum and shoe strings I'm not too sure how well the book link works, but it's an article from 1923 about not having envelops to seal ballots so they "for want of a wire on which to string the ballots, they stacked them in piles after they were counted, and tied them, thus piled, with strings two ways and sealed the strings with chewing gum where the knots crossed," this was the earliest usage that I could find