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Online Slangs & meanings of slangs

Slangs & AI meanings

  • up in
  • up in

    up in here, up in this place, up in that . . . A description of where you currently are, or are going.  "Yo, why you all up in here, I’m trying to sleep." 

  • o.d.'in
  • o.d.'in

    Over doing it.  "Dashawn you o.d.'in with them chips." 

  • I'll bust a cap in your #$&?!! (posterior)
  • I'll bust a cap in your #$&?!! (posterior)

    To shoot someone (not necessarily just in the gluteus maximus).  "Man, you best stop mad dawging me or I'll bust a cap in your #$&?!!" 

  • inked up
  • inked up

    v. Getting tattoo'd  "Did you see Camron? He just got inked up last night." 

  • innit
  • innit

    interj London “isn’t it.” A very London-centric contraction with nasal pronunciation obligatory: Well, the traffic’s always this bad at this time of night, innit guvnor.

  • all up in the kool-aid
  • all up in the kool-aid

    v. in someone's business.  "That's between me and Brian- don't be all up in the kool-aid!" 

  • all up in my biznezz
  • all up in my biznezz

    when someone is meddling in your affairs or dealings. They are "in your business."  "Quit asking about my girl . . . why you all up in my biznezz?" 

  • lie-in
  • lie-in

    n the act of staying in bed longer than you normally would. Very similar to “sleeping in,” though it implies something a little more deliberate. “Sorry, I was having a lie-in” would be as bad an excuse for being late for work as “sorry, I couldn’t be arsed getting up.”

  • interval
  • interval

    n intermission. The break in a stage performance where the audience can go off to have a pee and get some more beers in. At a stretch it could refer to the period of time in which advertisements are shown on television, though Brits more commonly refer to that as the “break.”

  • in the house
  • in the house

    not in an actual house but at a present gathering or location.  "My man Will's in da house!" 

  • indeed
  • indeed

    adv extra-much, when used after a statement: It was pretty warm to start with but when they turned on the booster rockets it got very hot indeed.

  • a into g
  • a into g

    Getting started on a project; abbreviated for of 'arse into gear' used as "Lord look at the time, I have to get my a into g!".

  • toad in the hole
  • toad in the hole

    n a delicacy consisting of sausages in Yorkshire pudding batter, in a sort of pie shape. The etymology is a tough one to guess at, as the dish itself contains no obvious holes and itÂ’s difficult, although not impossible, to confuse sausages and toads.

  • infomania
  • infomania

    n. the compulsive desire to get the latest news, or any information, especially via computer or cell phone. 

  • indicator
  • indicator

    n turn signal. The little orange lights that flash on the side of the car to show that youÂ’re about to frantically try and turn across four lanes of traffic into your driveway.

  • tuck in
  • tuck in

    v eat enthusiastically; dig in: Well, come on, tuck in before it gets cold! This is probably related to the term “tuck shop”, which similarly uses the word “tuck”. Also it might not be related at all.

  • in the cut
  • in the cut

    n. A designated location of saftey and or relaxation; usually secluded.  "I’ve been looking for you all day homie, where you been... My bad I was chillen In the Cut." 

  • in the heazy
  • in the heazy

    See "in the house." 

  • hole-in-the-wall
  • hole-in-the-wall

    n ATM. The term derives from a time many years ago when these devices were nothing more than holes in walls, stocked carefully in the mornings by bank employees. Next to the hole was a notepad, upon which customers wrote their names and the amounts of money they had taken. After some years it became apparent that the system was open to a degree of abuse, and a more elaborate one was invented to replace it. This is not true. Brits do not use the American definition of “hole in the wall” to mean a very small store or food vendor. Of course, this might not be true either. You’ve no way of working out whether to trust me or not now.

  • all up in my grill
  • all up in my grill

    the act of being in someone's face.  "Yo, you don't need to be all up in my grill unless you want me to put that smack-a-lack on ya!" 

Wiki AI search on online names & meanings containing BUCHHALTER IN

BUCHHALTER IN

  • Margit Feldman
  • Margit Buchhalter Feldman (June 12, 1929 – April 14, 2020) was a Hungarian-American public speaker, educator, activist, and Holocaust survivor. Feldman

  • Advanced Materials
  • Founder and editor-in-chief was Peter Goelitz (then editor of Angewandte Chemie). The current editors-in-chief are Irem Bayindir-Buchhalter and Esther Levy

  • Seizure
  • ISSN 0013-9580. Berg, Anne T.; Berkovic, Samuel F.; Brodie, Martin J.; Buchhalter, Jeffrey; Cross, J. Helen; Van Emde Boas, Walter; Engel, Jerome; French

  • Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy
  • Facts". Citizens United for Research in Epilepsy. Retrieved 18 March 2014. Harden, C; Tomson, T; Gloss, D; Buchhalter, J; Cross, JH; Donner, E; French, JA;

  • Epilepsy
  • hdl:2158/1262349. PMID 33720020. Thurman DJ, Beghi E, Begley CE, Berg AT, Buchhalter JR, Ding D, et al. (September 2011). "Standards for epidemiologic studies

  • Ketogenic diet
  • Zupec-Kania BA, Auvin S, Ballaban-Gil KR, Christina Bergqvist AG, Blackford R, Buchhalter JR, Caraballo RH, Cross JH, Dahlin MG, Donner EJ, Guzel O, Jehle RS, Klepper

  • Powerslave
  • Birch – producer, engineer, mixing Frank Gibson – assistant engineer Bruce Buchhalter – assistant engineer George Marino – mastering Derek Riggs – sleeve design

  • Piece of Mind
  • Gibson – assistant engineer Denis Haliburton – assistant engineer Bruce Buchhalter – assistant mixing engineer Derek Riggs – sleeve illustration, sleeve

  • Somewhere in Time (Iron Maiden album)
  • Martin "Masa" Birch – producer, engineer, mixing, tape operator Bruce Buchhalter – second engineer Sean Burrows – assistant engineer (Compass Point Studios)

  • The Final Frontier (Keel album)
  • Production Gene Simmons – producer Dave Wittman – engineer, mixing Bruce Buchhalter, Tom Nist, Kevin Smith – assistant engineers George Marino – mastering

Online Slangs & meanings of the slang BUCHHALTER IN

BUCHHALTER IN

  • up in
  • up in

    up in here, up in this place, up in that . . . A description of where you currently are, or are going.  "Yo, why you all up in here, I’m trying to sleep." 

  • o.d.'in
  • o.d.'in

    Over doing it.  "Dashawn you o.d.'in with them chips." 

  • I'll bust a cap in your #$&?!! (posterior)
  • I'll bust a cap in your #$&?!! (posterior)

    To shoot someone (not necessarily just in the gluteus maximus).  "Man, you best stop mad dawging me or I'll bust a cap in your #$&?!!" 

  • inked up
  • inked up

    v. Getting tattoo'd  "Did you see Camron? He just got inked up last night." 

  • innit
  • innit

    interj London “isn’t it.” A very London-centric contraction with nasal pronunciation obligatory: Well, the traffic’s always this bad at this time of night, innit guvnor.

  • all up in the kool-aid
  • all up in the kool-aid

    v. in someone's business.  "That's between me and Brian- don't be all up in the kool-aid!" 

  • all up in my biznezz
  • all up in my biznezz

    when someone is meddling in your affairs or dealings. They are "in your business."  "Quit asking about my girl . . . why you all up in my biznezz?" 

  • lie-in
  • lie-in

    n the act of staying in bed longer than you normally would. Very similar to “sleeping in,” though it implies something a little more deliberate. “Sorry, I was having a lie-in” would be as bad an excuse for being late for work as “sorry, I couldn’t be arsed getting up.”

  • interval
  • interval

    n intermission. The break in a stage performance where the audience can go off to have a pee and get some more beers in. At a stretch it could refer to the period of time in which advertisements are shown on television, though Brits more commonly refer to that as the “break.”

  • in the house
  • in the house

    not in an actual house but at a present gathering or location.  "My man Will's in da house!" 

  • indeed
  • indeed

    adv extra-much, when used after a statement: It was pretty warm to start with but when they turned on the booster rockets it got very hot indeed.

  • a into g
  • a into g

    Getting started on a project; abbreviated for of 'arse into gear' used as "Lord look at the time, I have to get my a into g!".

  • toad in the hole
  • toad in the hole

    n a delicacy consisting of sausages in Yorkshire pudding batter, in a sort of pie shape. The etymology is a tough one to guess at, as the dish itself contains no obvious holes and itÂ’s difficult, although not impossible, to confuse sausages and toads.

  • infomania
  • infomania

    n. the compulsive desire to get the latest news, or any information, especially via computer or cell phone. 

  • indicator
  • indicator

    n turn signal. The little orange lights that flash on the side of the car to show that youÂ’re about to frantically try and turn across four lanes of traffic into your driveway.

  • tuck in
  • tuck in

    v eat enthusiastically; dig in: Well, come on, tuck in before it gets cold! This is probably related to the term “tuck shop”, which similarly uses the word “tuck”. Also it might not be related at all.

  • in the cut
  • in the cut

    n. A designated location of saftey and or relaxation; usually secluded.  "I’ve been looking for you all day homie, where you been... My bad I was chillen In the Cut." 

  • in the heazy
  • in the heazy

    See "in the house." 

  • hole-in-the-wall
  • hole-in-the-wall

    n ATM. The term derives from a time many years ago when these devices were nothing more than holes in walls, stocked carefully in the mornings by bank employees. Next to the hole was a notepad, upon which customers wrote their names and the amounts of money they had taken. After some years it became apparent that the system was open to a degree of abuse, and a more elaborate one was invented to replace it. This is not true. Brits do not use the American definition of “hole in the wall” to mean a very small store or food vendor. Of course, this might not be true either. You’ve no way of working out whether to trust me or not now.

  • all up in my grill
  • all up in my grill

    the act of being in someone's face.  "Yo, you don't need to be all up in my grill unless you want me to put that smack-a-lack on ya!"Â