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Online Slangs & meanings of slangs

Slangs & AI meanings

  • AOAS
  • AOAS

    All Of A Sudden

  • tight
  • tight

    adj 1 drunk: My mother-in-law seemed rather nice the first time I met her, but I could swear she was tight. 2 miserly. IÂ’m too tired to think of an example phrase, youÂ’ll have to make your own up.

  • nick
  • nick

    v 1 steal. Something you buy from a dodgy bloke over a pint has quite probably been nicked. In a strange paradox, if a person is described as nicked, it means they’ve been arrested and if a person is in the nick, they’re in prison. 2 condition. Commonly used in the phrase “in good nick,” the word nick refers to the sort of state of repair something is in: Think I’ll buy that car; it seems in pretty nice nick.

  • wee
  • wee

    1 adj Scottish small: That’s an awfully wee car - are you sure you’ll all fit in it? In a loose sense it could also be interpreted as meaning “cute” in the “cute and cuddly” sense. You could tell someone they had a “nice wee dog,” but might meet with more curious glances if you used it in a more serious scenario: “Well, Mrs. Brown, I’m sad to tell you that you have a wee tumour on your cerebral cortex.” 2 v urinate: Back in a minute, I’m going to have a wee.

  • shandy
  • shandy

    n an alcoholic mix of lager and (British) lemonade. Usually 90% lager and 10% lemonade, and generally drunk by people convinced that they can get as drunk as a skunk on shandy and still be fine to drive the car. Shandy has also given us such retail gems as Top Deck, a canned drink which contains not only the cheapest lemonade money can buy, but rounds it off nicely with a dash of the grottiest beer available west of the Himalaya.

  • nice
  • nice

    A filler used in a conversation to compliment and identify something as cool or tight.  "Yo did you hear Joey Manifesto spit; the kid is nice on the mic." 

  • titchy
  • titchy

    adj very small; ickle. Perhaps slightly childish, but in common use in the U.K.: Well, the food was very nice, but the helpings were titchy!

  • Nice one!
  • Nice one!

    If someone does something particularly impressive you might say "nice one"! to them. It is close the Texan good job that you hear all the time.

  • Nice one!
  • Nice one!

    If someone does something particularly impressive you might say "nice one"! to them. It is close the Texan good job that you hear all the time.

  • pins
  • pins

    n legs. Always used in the complementary phrase “nice pins!”. You would never hear “my grandmother fell the other day and broke both her pins”.

  • quite
  • quite

    n kind of; sort of: What did you think of Jean’s new boyfriend? / Hmm, yeah, I suppose he was quite nice. This is something of a tough one because Brits will also use quite, in the same way as Americans, to mean “very.” The only real way to determine exactly which type of quite is being used is to look at how expressive the word that follows it is. If it’s a word like “perfect” or “delicious” then it’s being used the positive way; if it’s a word like “nice” or “pleasant” then it’s negative.

  • alvida
  • alvida

    Used when saying goodbye (ed: I had NO idea what it meant when adding it, but it sounded nice. Since then we've had lots of comment!) The first contributor wrote thusly: It would appear that this word for good-bye is a slang for the German 'auf wiedersehen'. Phonetically, it sounds like 'al vee der zane. Hence, 'alvida'.(ed: wasn't right of course, and then we had more comments??) On the other hand, Sameer (and Anil) wrote, "Alvida is a pure Urdu word which means goodbye. As mentioned on your page it may have some similarity with the german word but that would probably because of the fact that German and Hindi have same origin (Sanskrit) and Urdu is derived from Persian, Hindi and one more language. (ed: so there ya go Bumpuppy (who whinged about one of the previous definitions being in here!!) You live and learn! Yet another comment, this time from Pradeep: "Alvida is a commonly used word in India and it literally means goodbye. It is used in literature quite a lot and is becoming less frequently used word in day to day interaction."

  • Nice!
  • Nice!

    Really Cool or Amazing "Nice Dude!"

  • AOAS
  • AOAS

    All of a sudden

  • NICELY DONE
  • NICELY DONE

    Nicely done is British slang for pleasantly drunk, intoxicated.

  • stodgy
  • stodgy

    adj sticky; reluctant to change. Could apply equally easily to people (Everyone else was very eager except Bob, who was being decidedly stodgy about it) or substances (the soup looked nice but it turned out to be stodgy as hell).

  • NICE ONE, CYRIL
  • NICE ONE, CYRIL

    Nice one, Cyril is London Cockney rhyming slang for squirrel.

  • NICE ENOUGH
  • NICE ENOUGH

    Nice enough is London Cockney rhyming slang for a male homosexual (puff).

Wiki AI search on online names & meanings containing AKOYAS NICE

AKOYAS NICE

  • ICON A5
  • AeroVolga Borey ATOL 650 LSA AirMax SeaMax EDRA Aeronautica Super Pétrel LISA Akoya MVP Model 3 Nordic Omsider Progressive Aerodyne SeaRey Seawind International

  • Progressive Aerodyne SeaRey
  • D. (2013). Travels with Puff: A Gentle Game of Life and Death. Reno NV: Nice Tiger. Bach, R. (2014). Illusions ii: The adventures of a reluctant student

  • Kokolo Afrobeat Orchestra
  • result of internal disagreements, most of the initial group left to form the Akoya Afrobeat Ensemble. Finding themselves stuck with an upcoming tour and no

Online Slangs & meanings of the slang AKOYAS NICE

AKOYAS NICE

  • AOAS
  • AOAS

    All Of A Sudden

  • tight
  • tight

    adj 1 drunk: My mother-in-law seemed rather nice the first time I met her, but I could swear she was tight. 2 miserly. IÂ’m too tired to think of an example phrase, youÂ’ll have to make your own up.

  • nick
  • nick

    v 1 steal. Something you buy from a dodgy bloke over a pint has quite probably been nicked. In a strange paradox, if a person is described as nicked, it means they’ve been arrested and if a person is in the nick, they’re in prison. 2 condition. Commonly used in the phrase “in good nick,” the word nick refers to the sort of state of repair something is in: Think I’ll buy that car; it seems in pretty nice nick.

  • wee
  • wee

    1 adj Scottish small: That’s an awfully wee car - are you sure you’ll all fit in it? In a loose sense it could also be interpreted as meaning “cute” in the “cute and cuddly” sense. You could tell someone they had a “nice wee dog,” but might meet with more curious glances if you used it in a more serious scenario: “Well, Mrs. Brown, I’m sad to tell you that you have a wee tumour on your cerebral cortex.” 2 v urinate: Back in a minute, I’m going to have a wee.

  • shandy
  • shandy

    n an alcoholic mix of lager and (British) lemonade. Usually 90% lager and 10% lemonade, and generally drunk by people convinced that they can get as drunk as a skunk on shandy and still be fine to drive the car. Shandy has also given us such retail gems as Top Deck, a canned drink which contains not only the cheapest lemonade money can buy, but rounds it off nicely with a dash of the grottiest beer available west of the Himalaya.

  • nice
  • nice

    A filler used in a conversation to compliment and identify something as cool or tight.  "Yo did you hear Joey Manifesto spit; the kid is nice on the mic." 

  • titchy
  • titchy

    adj very small; ickle. Perhaps slightly childish, but in common use in the U.K.: Well, the food was very nice, but the helpings were titchy!

  • Nice one!
  • Nice one!

    If someone does something particularly impressive you might say "nice one"! to them. It is close the Texan good job that you hear all the time.

  • Nice one!
  • Nice one!

    If someone does something particularly impressive you might say "nice one"! to them. It is close the Texan good job that you hear all the time.

  • pins
  • pins

    n legs. Always used in the complementary phrase “nice pins!”. You would never hear “my grandmother fell the other day and broke both her pins”.

  • quite
  • quite

    n kind of; sort of: What did you think of Jean’s new boyfriend? / Hmm, yeah, I suppose he was quite nice. This is something of a tough one because Brits will also use quite, in the same way as Americans, to mean “very.” The only real way to determine exactly which type of quite is being used is to look at how expressive the word that follows it is. If it’s a word like “perfect” or “delicious” then it’s being used the positive way; if it’s a word like “nice” or “pleasant” then it’s negative.

  • alvida
  • alvida

    Used when saying goodbye (ed: I had NO idea what it meant when adding it, but it sounded nice. Since then we've had lots of comment!) The first contributor wrote thusly: It would appear that this word for good-bye is a slang for the German 'auf wiedersehen'. Phonetically, it sounds like 'al vee der zane. Hence, 'alvida'.(ed: wasn't right of course, and then we had more comments??) On the other hand, Sameer (and Anil) wrote, "Alvida is a pure Urdu word which means goodbye. As mentioned on your page it may have some similarity with the german word but that would probably because of the fact that German and Hindi have same origin (Sanskrit) and Urdu is derived from Persian, Hindi and one more language. (ed: so there ya go Bumpuppy (who whinged about one of the previous definitions being in here!!) You live and learn! Yet another comment, this time from Pradeep: "Alvida is a commonly used word in India and it literally means goodbye. It is used in literature quite a lot and is becoming less frequently used word in day to day interaction."

  • Nice!
  • Nice!

    Really Cool or Amazing "Nice Dude!"

  • AOAS
  • AOAS

    All of a sudden

  • NICELY DONE
  • NICELY DONE

    Nicely done is British slang for pleasantly drunk, intoxicated.

  • stodgy
  • stodgy

    adj sticky; reluctant to change. Could apply equally easily to people (Everyone else was very eager except Bob, who was being decidedly stodgy about it) or substances (the soup looked nice but it turned out to be stodgy as hell).

  • NICE ONE, CYRIL
  • NICE ONE, CYRIL

    Nice one, Cyril is London Cockney rhyming slang for squirrel.

  • NICE ENOUGH
  • NICE ENOUGH

    Nice enough is London Cockney rhyming slang for a male homosexual (puff).