What is Lunching?
1.
D.C. Metro area term for being absurd, ridiculous, or idiotic.
i.e. out to lunch
She wore what?--she be lunching.
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2.
a D.C word that can encompass any act when presented in the proper context.
A.I was smoking weed and i started lunching out
B.I had fifteen minutes to kill before class so i just lunched around in my car.
C.Yo dont play with that electrical socket YOURE LUNCHING
3.
Lunching - Gerund: Washington D.C. term meaning that someone is acting stupid or lame. Similar to "out to
"Do you have a smoke?"
Checks pockets for cigarettes, "No I quit five years ago."
"Man, you are lunching"
4.
to act weird do crazy stuff act stupid
yo dat boi lunchin.
5.
The art of everything lunching. Can be used in any shape or form. The word really has no definition because the people who utilize it (usually potheads residing in the Washington D.C./ Montgomery County Area) only do so as a variable. Everything can be lunching, and at the same time nothing can be lunching. The word is not something to be learned; rather, it is a word to be understood, and once understood, can, and most probably will become a word you use in your vocabulary more often than linking operaters like "the" or "and".
Origins: The origin of the word and it's definition is very different from what it has become today. Supposedly, in a high school in Rockville, Maryland, there was a very obese student who used to sit all by himself in the Cafeteria and eat his lunch, which consisted of anything and everything that could be eaten. Fellow classmates called this boy a "
"Oh My God! That dude's knees are lunching OUUUT!"
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6.
When someone is either not concentrating or is not giving their full attention to a task or conversation.
I just asked Joe a question and he just looked at me with a blank stare, he must be lunching.
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7.
Most likely from the French 'luncheon', lunching burst into the American lexicon circa 1992 in the Washington DC Metropolitan Area.
Intransitive verb: to laugh hysterically/uncontrollably
Transitive verb: causing above in another person
Intransitive: "I just saw a fat man driving a tiny car and I started lunching my butt off."
Transitive: "This guy... this guy right here... is lunching me out!"
"Would you like to come over and smoke and have a nice light lunch?"
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