AI & ChatGPT job searches for AUDITOR NOTURNO

Jobs AUDITOR NOTURNO. jobs for AUDITOR NOTURNO

Jobs AUDITOR NOTURNO!

Find jobs, jobs near me, AUDITOR NOTURNO

Local jobs, jobs near me

Online Slangs & meanings of slangs

Slangs & AI meanings

  • shreddie
  • shreddie

    Hairstyle used by (and insult used for) men whose hair is thinning, in a vain attempt to make it look as if it has some "body". In shape and form it has the unfortunate result of looking like they have a Shredded Wheat* on their heads thus rendering them a laughing stock to all and sundry - except that of course to themselves. A famous "Shreddie" is Andrew O'Neill sometime editor of The Times Newspaper. *For those unfamiliar with the term, Shredded Wheat is a kind of breakfast 'biscuit' that looks feels and tastes like knitted straw.

  • brillo
  • brillo

    Nickname for a peculiar style of hair favoured by middle-aged balding males who are attempting to disguise the fact that they ARE losing their hair. Nickname is also used for men who use this hairstyle. One of the most famous people thus endowed is Andrew O'Neill, is one time editor of The Times (UK) now turned media jock. I hear from Mark Skinner that despite changing roles, "Brillo" still gets his regular pasting in the satirical magazine, Private Eye.

  • CD
  • CD

    Abreviation for "Compact Disc". A disc that stores and plays audio information, music, or video games. These came out in 1983, but really took off in the late 1990's. Today, 2005, almost everything is on CD.

  • finger puppet audition
  • finger puppet audition

    Masturbation.

  • Eat My Shorts
  • Eat My Shorts

    Phrase used as a comeback. Heavily in use in the 80's and also used on TV's 'The Simpsons'. If someone was to put you down in anyway, you can reply with this phrase. Phrase gained earlier popularity from it's use by John Bender (Nelson Judd) in 'The Breakfast Club' (1985) ~Editor

  • jickies
  • jickies

    Jickies - English people. (ed: entered verbatim) I remember my parents and relatives (in Rhode Island) referring to English folk as "jickies" (NOT in a derogatory way) and never knew what it meant. About 15 years ago, because of a conversation with a co-worker, I started researching it and finally found someone (I think the arts and entertainment editor of the Providence Journal) who laughed when I asked about it and said it referred to a specific job some of the English did in the textile mills (in England???) and the job was using a "jickie" or something like that. Sent in by Christine

  • dropping bottom
  • dropping bottom

    Driving around with the bass on the audio system set at a vibration level liable to cause permanent damage to hearing and possibly other internal organs. Or to put it another way, "Yo dude just chillin round town dropping bottom. To elucidate, "dropping bottom" is dumping extreme amounts of low frequencies into the stratosphere. i.e. big subwoofers in a automobile.

  • The JAM!
  • The JAM!

    So some friends and you are at a breakdancing competition. After one dancer does a particularly good combo of headspins and freezes he finally finishes up with a backflip. You say to your friend "That homeboys moves are the JAM!" (the emphasis is always on the word "JAM" so as it is louder and more funky than the rest of the sentence). We at the 80's Revival Company feel it is very close to the phrase "That's the s#*t". But since s#*t isn't really a good thing and JAM is, whether it be a Jam band, actual jam for your samich, or any other jam, we are sticking with JAM. Since the 80's style is back in fashion, the 80's Revival Company has charged itself with completing a sociological experiment to the max. We have several key members placed in highly trendy or influential locations and businesses in order to spread the terminology of the 80's. "Rad" and "The JAM!" are two of the first installments and have been placed throughout with our affiliates. *Editor - Very interesting...

  • slap and tickle
  • slap and tickle

    Gentle cuddling where girl pretends to be outraged by the groping attentions of her suitor and retaliates in a mock aggresive fashion.

  • tricolore
  • tricolore

    Not really 'slang' but interesting nevertheless - quoted verbatim: "Not exactly a word, this was the French textbook loads of people learnt French from. There were a number of things we found amusing such as the guy who always asked "Est-ce-qu'il-y-a un Banc pres d'ici?" in a voice so deep it made Mr Bean sound like Joe Pasquali. The reason for this we realised must be due to the fact that the Tricolore audio cassetes were recorded by two blokes, and since any women's voices were just a bloke talking in a high-pitched voice, they had to make the blokes obvious, and consequently they all had deep voices. This was not helped by the fact that our French tapes were all played on the standard "School-Issue" Coomber cassete player with a big black woven-grille front and a wooden back with holes drilled in it. These cassete players invariably resonated erratically no matter what kind of sound was being played. Some common Tricolore Phrases: • "Comment????" • "Oui, Madamme, il-y-a une Banc la-bas." • "Numero UN!!!, Sex-ion A!!!! EX-OM-PLUH!!!" Of course, all our books dated back to the seventies so when I was at school in the mid nineties you couldn't see the photos due to the "modifications" that other students had made over the years. I remember the Woman-With-The-Petrol-Pump photo was the most graffitied.

Wiki AI search on online names & meanings containing AUDITOR NOTURNO

AUDITOR NOTURNO

Online Slangs & meanings of the slang AUDITOR NOTURNO

AUDITOR NOTURNO

  • shreddie
  • shreddie

    Hairstyle used by (and insult used for) men whose hair is thinning, in a vain attempt to make it look as if it has some "body". In shape and form it has the unfortunate result of looking like they have a Shredded Wheat* on their heads thus rendering them a laughing stock to all and sundry - except that of course to themselves. A famous "Shreddie" is Andrew O'Neill sometime editor of The Times Newspaper. *For those unfamiliar with the term, Shredded Wheat is a kind of breakfast 'biscuit' that looks feels and tastes like knitted straw.

  • brillo
  • brillo

    Nickname for a peculiar style of hair favoured by middle-aged balding males who are attempting to disguise the fact that they ARE losing their hair. Nickname is also used for men who use this hairstyle. One of the most famous people thus endowed is Andrew O'Neill, is one time editor of The Times (UK) now turned media jock. I hear from Mark Skinner that despite changing roles, "Brillo" still gets his regular pasting in the satirical magazine, Private Eye.

  • CD
  • CD

    Abreviation for "Compact Disc". A disc that stores and plays audio information, music, or video games. These came out in 1983, but really took off in the late 1990's. Today, 2005, almost everything is on CD.

  • finger puppet audition
  • finger puppet audition

    Masturbation.

  • Eat My Shorts
  • Eat My Shorts

    Phrase used as a comeback. Heavily in use in the 80's and also used on TV's 'The Simpsons'. If someone was to put you down in anyway, you can reply with this phrase. Phrase gained earlier popularity from it's use by John Bender (Nelson Judd) in 'The Breakfast Club' (1985) ~Editor

  • jickies
  • jickies

    Jickies - English people. (ed: entered verbatim) I remember my parents and relatives (in Rhode Island) referring to English folk as "jickies" (NOT in a derogatory way) and never knew what it meant. About 15 years ago, because of a conversation with a co-worker, I started researching it and finally found someone (I think the arts and entertainment editor of the Providence Journal) who laughed when I asked about it and said it referred to a specific job some of the English did in the textile mills (in England???) and the job was using a "jickie" or something like that. Sent in by Christine

  • dropping bottom
  • dropping bottom

    Driving around with the bass on the audio system set at a vibration level liable to cause permanent damage to hearing and possibly other internal organs. Or to put it another way, "Yo dude just chillin round town dropping bottom. To elucidate, "dropping bottom" is dumping extreme amounts of low frequencies into the stratosphere. i.e. big subwoofers in a automobile.

  • The JAM!
  • The JAM!

    So some friends and you are at a breakdancing competition. After one dancer does a particularly good combo of headspins and freezes he finally finishes up with a backflip. You say to your friend "That homeboys moves are the JAM!" (the emphasis is always on the word "JAM" so as it is louder and more funky than the rest of the sentence). We at the 80's Revival Company feel it is very close to the phrase "That's the s#*t". But since s#*t isn't really a good thing and JAM is, whether it be a Jam band, actual jam for your samich, or any other jam, we are sticking with JAM. Since the 80's style is back in fashion, the 80's Revival Company has charged itself with completing a sociological experiment to the max. We have several key members placed in highly trendy or influential locations and businesses in order to spread the terminology of the 80's. "Rad" and "The JAM!" are two of the first installments and have been placed throughout with our affiliates. *Editor - Very interesting...

  • slap and tickle
  • slap and tickle

    Gentle cuddling where girl pretends to be outraged by the groping attentions of her suitor and retaliates in a mock aggresive fashion.

  • tricolore
  • tricolore

    Not really 'slang' but interesting nevertheless - quoted verbatim: "Not exactly a word, this was the French textbook loads of people learnt French from. There were a number of things we found amusing such as the guy who always asked "Est-ce-qu'il-y-a un Banc pres d'ici?" in a voice so deep it made Mr Bean sound like Joe Pasquali. The reason for this we realised must be due to the fact that the Tricolore audio cassetes were recorded by two blokes, and since any women's voices were just a bloke talking in a high-pitched voice, they had to make the blokes obvious, and consequently they all had deep voices. This was not helped by the fact that our French tapes were all played on the standard "School-Issue" Coomber cassete player with a big black woven-grille front and a wooden back with holes drilled in it. These cassete players invariably resonated erratically no matter what kind of sound was being played. Some common Tricolore Phrases: • "Comment????" • "Oui, Madamme, il-y-a une Banc la-bas." • "Numero UN!!!, Sex-ion A!!!! EX-OM-PLUH!!!" Of course, all our books dated back to the seventies so when I was at school in the mid nineties you couldn't see the photos due to the "modifications" that other students had made over the years. I remember the Woman-With-The-Petrol-Pump photo was the most graffitied.