Dead Horse
A name for a person who declines an invitation to a social situation or event, without a
valid excuse. Usually occurs when someone is
invited out but decides to
stay in for the night simply because they are "kind of tired".
dead horse
by Trav on Oct 28, 2004 05:48:34
Military term for an issue that has been adressed over and over and over again. Comes from the expression ”You’re
beating a dead horse.”, meaning that talking about the issue is not going to change anything so drop it.
Dead horse can also be used to describe words such as 1337, emo, and townie. There are already hundreds of similar defs for those terms, enough already their
dead horses, stop beating them and move on.
Example:
Captain
Snuffy - “Men, I’ve called this meeting here today to stress to you the importance of cleanliness in the barracks and to discuss the upcoming deployment to Iraq. Soldiers need
to sweep out their rooms daily and...”
(2 hours later)
..and also I would like to be informed in writing when the troops have taken out the trash in the recreation room, and"
Sergeant – "SIR, WE’VE GOT IT!! It’s a dead freaking horse can
we move on to other issues now?"
dead horse
by knowman on Mar 02, 2008 08:04:24
in the salvage trade
a dead horse is something you got for little or nothing because the former owner really wanted to get rid of it. a pallet of computer monitors the bank gave away is a dead horse. the trick is to sell the best parts as
horse meat, the not so best parts as dog food,and give the rest away before it starts to stink and you have to pay to dispose of it. making money
on dead horses is a skill that takes years to learn.
Example:
old computer parts,old computer monitors(
disposal costs), paint (disposal costs), anything that you have to pay to get rid of. i got a load of paint for $1 a can. i hope the paint is
useable, or that dead horse will really stink.