lotr9690
Well-Known Member
It's derived from Humphrey Bogart, who was famous for leaving a bunch of saliva on his tobacco cigarettes. It was popularized by Will and Grace's episode "The Vent," where the character Jack McFarland writes an unintentionally funny play about Will and Grace committing suicide by drinking poison. While Grace is downing the poison Will yells "Alright, Grace, don't Bogart the poison!" Just a little off-topic pop-culture reference for everyone.bo·gart
ˈbōɡärt/
verb
USinformal
verb: bogart; 3rd person present: bogarts; past tense: bogarted; past participle: bogarted; gerund or present participle: bogarting
...thought this was a Harry Potter enemy, nope apparently its stonner lingo
- selfishly appropriate or keep (something, especially a lit marijuana cigarette).
Last edited: