Borys and Kosma, are you also really good at cleaning?
Dawg, my shit shines so bright it would burn your fucking racist eyes out.
I don't know why I never made this connection before
pol⋅ish [pol-ish] Show IPA
Use polish in a Sentence
–verb (used with object)
1. to make smooth and glossy, esp. by rubbing or friction: to polish a brass doorknob.
2. to render finished, refined, or elegant: His speech needs polishing.
–verb (used without object)
3. to become smooth and glossy through polishing: a flooring that polishes easily.
4. Archaic. to become refined or elegant.
–noun
5. a substance used to give smoothness or gloss: shoe polish.
6. the act of polishing.
7. state of being polished.
8. smoothness and gloss of surface.
9. superiority of manner or execution; refinement; elegance: the polish of a professional singer.
—Verb phrases
10. polish off, Informal.
a. to finish or dispose of quickly: They polished off a gallon of ice cream between them.
b. to subdue or get rid of someone: The fighter polished off his opponent in the first round.
11. polish up, to improve; refine: She took lessons to polish up her speech.
Origin:
1250–1300; ME polishen < MF poliss-, long s. of polir < L polīre to polish; see -ish 2
Related forms:
pol⋅ish⋅er, noun
Synonyms:
1. shine, brighten, burnish, buff, smooth. 8. shine, gleam. Polish, gloss, luster, sheen refer to a smooth, shining, or bright surface from which light is reflected. Polish suggests the smooth, bright reflection often produced by friction: rubbed to a high polish. Gloss suggests a superficial, hard smoothness characteristic of lacquered, varnished, or enameled surfaces: a gloss on oilcloth, on paper. Luster denotes the characteristic quality of the light reflected from the surfaces of certain materials (pearls, silk, wax, freshly cut metals, etc.): a pearly luster. Sheen, sometimes poetical, suggests a glistening brightness such as that reflected from the surface of silk or velvet, or from furniture oiled and hand-polished: a rich velvety sheen.
