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Sudbury, ON, Canada
Bonjour! In desperate need of job.
Hi! I am in desperate need of job for my survival and tuition fee. Need a SIN Job. I can handle any work like administrative to household chores, baby sitting to child care. Crew member to kitchen helper. Any job. ASAP.
Slangs & AI meanings
abandoned in a time of need I
desperate desire for drugs; addiction; craving
The feeling of being in dire need of defecation.
Desperate Dan is London Cockney rhyming slang for a sun tan.
a guinea. A slang word used in Britain and chiefly London from around 1750-1850. Ned was seemingly not pluralised when referring to a number of guineas, eg., 'It'll cost you ten ned..' A half-ned was half a guinea. The slang ned appears in at least one of Bruce Alexander's Blind Justice series of books (thanks P Bostock for raising this) set in London's Covent Garden area and a period of George III's reign from around 1760 onwards. It is conceivable that the use also later transferred for a while to a soverign and a pound, being similar currency units, although I'm not aware of specific evidence of this. The ned slang word certainly transferred to America, around 1850, and apparently was used up to the 1920s. In the US a ned was a ten dollar gold coin, and a half-ned was a five dollar coin. Precise origin of the word ned is uncertain although it is connected indirectly (by Chambers and Cassells for example) with a straightforward rhyming slang for the word head (conventional ockney rhyming slang is slightly more complex than this), which seems plausible given that the monarch's head appeared on guinea coins. Ned was traditionally used as a generic name for a man around these times, as evidenced by its meaning extending to a thuggish man or youth, or a petty criminal (US), and also a reference (mainly in the US) to the devil, (old Ned, raising merry Ned, etc). These, and the rhyming head connection, are not factual origins of how ned became a slang money term; they are merely suggestions of possible usage origin and/or reinforcement.
Noun. In need of an act of defecation. E.g."Stop the car! I need the toilet, I've got one in the departure lounge."
Noun. 1. Marijuana, but now applied to cannabis also. In the North-west of England weed is not always used in the plural, for example in the question "have you got a weed?" 2. A cigarette. [Manchester use?] 3. A feeble person, a weakling.
Desperate, in a fat slaggy kind of a way. Not nice.
Combination of nerd and geek intended as an intensifier.
Weed is slang for a cigarette, tobacco. Weed is slang for cannabis.Weed is British slang for a weak and ineffective person. Weed is British slang for to steal, embezzle.
A person who shags dogs. Originated in a legend from Coventry (West Midlands, UK) of a boy who had sex with his dog for a dare.
Cans (headphones). ere - put your desperates on
Oliver Reed is British rhyming slang for amphetamine (speed). Oliver Reed is London Cockney rhyming slang for tobacco (weed). Oliver Reed is London Cockney rhyming slang for cannabis (weed).
- Desperate, in a fat slaggy kind of a way. Not nice.
in need of drugs
Chicken feed is slang for a trifling amount of money.
In front of is Black−American slang for to have control of a situation
Ditch weed is slang for marijuana of inferior quality, marijuana growing naturally in the wild.
Bonjour! In desperate need of job.
abandoned in a time of need I
desperate desire for drugs; addiction; craving
The feeling of being in dire need of defecation.
Desperate Dan is London Cockney rhyming slang for a sun tan.
a guinea. A slang word used in Britain and chiefly London from around 1750-1850. Ned was seemingly not pluralised when referring to a number of guineas, eg., 'It'll cost you ten ned..' A half-ned was half a guinea. The slang ned appears in at least one of Bruce Alexander's Blind Justice series of books (thanks P Bostock for raising this) set in London's Covent Garden area and a period of George III's reign from around 1760 onwards. It is conceivable that the use also later transferred for a while to a soverign and a pound, being similar currency units, although I'm not aware of specific evidence of this. The ned slang word certainly transferred to America, around 1850, and apparently was used up to the 1920s. In the US a ned was a ten dollar gold coin, and a half-ned was a five dollar coin. Precise origin of the word ned is uncertain although it is connected indirectly (by Chambers and Cassells for example) with a straightforward rhyming slang for the word head (conventional ockney rhyming slang is slightly more complex than this), which seems plausible given that the monarch's head appeared on guinea coins. Ned was traditionally used as a generic name for a man around these times, as evidenced by its meaning extending to a thuggish man or youth, or a petty criminal (US), and also a reference (mainly in the US) to the devil, (old Ned, raising merry Ned, etc). These, and the rhyming head connection, are not factual origins of how ned became a slang money term; they are merely suggestions of possible usage origin and/or reinforcement.
Noun. In need of an act of defecation. E.g."Stop the car! I need the toilet, I've got one in the departure lounge."
Noun. 1. Marijuana, but now applied to cannabis also. In the North-west of England weed is not always used in the plural, for example in the question "have you got a weed?" 2. A cigarette. [Manchester use?] 3. A feeble person, a weakling.
Desperate, in a fat slaggy kind of a way. Not nice.
Combination of nerd and geek intended as an intensifier.
Weed is slang for a cigarette, tobacco. Weed is slang for cannabis.Weed is British slang for a weak and ineffective person. Weed is British slang for to steal, embezzle.
A person who shags dogs. Originated in a legend from Coventry (West Midlands, UK) of a boy who had sex with his dog for a dare.
Cans (headphones). ere - put your desperates on
Oliver Reed is British rhyming slang for amphetamine (speed). Oliver Reed is London Cockney rhyming slang for tobacco (weed). Oliver Reed is London Cockney rhyming slang for cannabis (weed).
- Desperate, in a fat slaggy kind of a way. Not nice.
in need of drugs
Chicken feed is slang for a trifling amount of money.
In front of is Black−American slang for to have control of a situation
Ditch weed is slang for marijuana of inferior quality, marijuana growing naturally in the wild.
Bonjour! In desperate need of job.
an FBI agent who poses as a handyman in order to spy on Thony Yancey Arias as Neto (season 4) Daniel Bonjour as Dr. Dupont (season 4) Alain Uy as Feng
became desperate to dissuade Thomas, who remained determined to join the Dominicans. At one point, two of his brothers resorted to the measure of hiring
opportunities that parents and children desperately need to lift their families from the depths of the bondage of poverty to a stable and healthy state
Salomé, in which Salomé believed that Nietzsche was desperately in love with her. While the three spent a number of weeks together in Leipzig in October
helper services such as Bonjour), and is updated automatically through the store rather than using Apple Software Update. The role of iTunes has been replaced
of walkers that rushes them, and one that may have been left as a trap. Glenn, Tara, and Noah join Nicholas and Deanna's son, Aiden (Daniel Bonjour)
Audrey Hepburn (Sabrina, 1954, and as a "Gréco beatnik" in Funny Face, 1957) and Jean Seberg (Bonjour Tristesse, 1958 and A bout de souffle, 1960), as well
Huxtable in only four episodes: the 10th, 19th, 21st, and 24th of the season. For this season, the opening credits were changed to a series of clips of the
Clinton: The French Years". The New York Times. "Goodbye White House...bonjour Paris?". CNN. 17 January 2001. Grace Wyler (26 September 2012). "Bill Clinton
government that has been in charge of education for a generation will be able to control its subjects securely without the need of armies or policemen. As