Slang for a lazy good for nothing person who doesnt benefit in any positive way.
When you think of a Pongo, you would think of something that displeases all senses in any way.
When you think of a Pongo, you would think of something that displeases all senses in any way.
Hey Helen, want to look at the python in my pocket?
Fuck off, Pongo, shes obviously in a state of shock that you are more of a threat to the environment than nuclear bombs.
Fuck off, Pongo, shes obviously in a state of shock that you are more of a threat to the environment than nuclear bombs.
by Dafralanatah December 01, 2009
by pongo18 September 04, 2018
A person who doesn't believe in using deodorants but happy to use recreational drugs. They also have tendancies for being vegan to "save the planet" and blaming everyone for all that's wrong in their lives.
"I was with this crazy pongo the other night! She went like a train! Such a shame about her hygiene"
by King for a day 1994 December 29, 2020
silly, funny. Extremely sexy, goofy, has trouble running; used to describe someone who is outrageously awesome and funny. Pongos r good at making people laugh and are good with the ladies.
by peanutty3QT February 08, 2008
by Buster F October 16, 2006
a racial slur referring to black people
by Jose Arauz January 10, 2008
British slang dating from the mid to late nineteenth century, meaning soldiers. Soldiers were not popular at this time as Kipling’s poem Tommy shows (Barrack Room Ballads 1892). The word itself stems from expressions used by comedians in theatres and music halls to get a cheap laugh. The two that are most commonly quoted are "where the army goes the pong goes", or “when the wind blows the pong goes”, pong meaning smell. This quickly became pongoes meaning soldiers plural and pongo meaning an individual. Another possible explanation is that the soldiers were being likened to a large, hairy, smelly ape called a pongo. The expression is still in use today although not common, confined mainly to those who saw service in World War II or Korea (very few now) or who did National Service in Britain while this was still compulsory.
by AKACroatalin February 18, 2016