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Discover LudwigThe phrase "ass back" is not standard or widely accepted in written English.
It may be used in informal contexts, often to convey a sense of returning to a previous state or position, but it is generally considered crude.
Example: "After a long day at work, I just want to kick back and relax, but I have to get my ass back to the office for a meeting."
Alternatives: "rear end" or "backside".
Exact(49)
"Had to leave my team and haul ass back to base".
Get your black ass back over heuh!" Nimrod laughing through his fingers, hiding his enormous teeth.
Tell him to get off his ass!' " "Back in New York, we called his lawyer," Spolan said.
"Get your ass back home and have a few lies-in and a good rest!", she tweeted.
Pam could sell Kev his ass back to him in 12 wafer-thin slices with the best-before date scratched off.
Can't just sit on your ass back there!" "Got it!" Twenty minutes later, a man in a black sweatshirt came in.
Similar(11)
"Get your asses back to work.
And, what I like best, it does all this in a nonchalant, offhand way as if insomnia, faking testicular cancer, vibrating luggage, subliminal pornography in family cartoons and "selling rich women their own fat asses back to them" were everyday subject matter.
"It's time to send your asses back!" one man shouted as he drove by.
And just like that, we bounce our chilly white asses back to the big town with a bunch of fur in tow.
Ass-backward, back-assward and every ass and back in between.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com