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Online Slangs & meanings of slangs

Slangs & AI meanings

  • Shirty
  • Shirty

    - "Don't get shirty with me young man" was what my Dad used to tell me when I was little. He was referring to my response to his telling off for doing some terrible little boy thing. Like tying my brother to the back of Mum's car or putting my shoes in the toilet. It meant I was getting bad tempered.

  • domex
  • domex

    PCP and MDMA

  • buttaface
  • buttaface

    adj. A term used when describing a girl who has an attractive body, but an unattractive face.  "Ayo, Mailissa is a buttaface... everything look good but her face." 

  • ZIZZY
  • ZIZZY

    Zizzy is American slang for a nap, a snooze.

  • sado-masochism
  • sado-masochism

    Sexual pleasure derived from pain, torture, domination.

  • cloud nine
  • cloud nine

    Crack cocaine; methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA)

  • BUTTONED UP
  • BUTTONED UP

    Buttoned up is slang for taciturn; silent and somewhat tense.

  • gas bomb
  • gas bomb

    Used to describe the act of sitting on a hard surface (often a garden wall or playground floor) to delay the imminent force of the need for a 'number 2'. "I'm going to do a gasbomb". Gas bombs usually lasted from 1 to 5 minutes, until the offending sensation had subsided. , This would often give you about 20 minutes more play before the need for the toilet or another (often increasingly harder to contain) Gas Bomb. A successful gas bomb would normally be met with the expression "I've caved it". Implying the offending number 2 had been forced into hibernation for a while. An unsuccessful gas bomb (rare, but have been done), does not warrant description.

  • fuzz
  • fuzz

    The police. General term for any law enforcement operatives. (ed: anyone got any idea why the police became known as fuzz) Martin couldn't help with the origins but suggested the word was used to describe the police during the late sixties and seventies but is less common today, in N. America at least. Keith suggests this origin: It originated in the 60s hippies days, when crewcuts/skinhead cuts were de rigeur for the police, as opposed to the flowing locks of those using the word. Normal usage in late 60s/early 70s UK - I think the musical 'Hair' may have popularised it.

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