Fashion & Fads
Slang
Hip, hep, keen, neat-o, cool, groovy, far-out, outa-sight, boss, square |
(Dig it, Daddy-O, I'd love to add more, but this just ain't my bag.) |
Slang
Hip, hep, keen, neat-o, cool, groovy, far-out, outa-sight, boss, square |
(Dig it, Daddy-O, I'd love to add more, but this just ain't my bag.) |
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There are 5 comments for this item.
To "shine them [someone] on" meant, depending on the the era and who you hung out with, to ignore (70's) or to deceive (80's or later)
This should not be confused with "shine it on" from the 70s.
But I think there's a slight difference between the two.
Shine it on was more like "I think I'll pass".
Shine meant "Screw you, I'm not going to do it."
But maybe someone from the 70s on here knows better?
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