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Online Slangs & meanings of slangs

Slangs & AI meanings

  • whoop
  • whoop

    v. To beat up.  "You mad doggin me? I'll whoop you so bad your cousin will cry!"  2. To beat someone in a sport.  "We whooped their team 126 to 57!" 

  • SPORT
  • SPORT

    Sport is slang for close a door so as to indicate that one is busy.

  • kit
  • kit

    n sports uniform (e.g. rugby kit, football kit). More generally in the U.K., kit refers to the equipment necessary to perform a particular task - usually, though not always, sporting. The boundary is woolly to such a degree that it’s difficult to generalise - I’ve heard all sorts of things from parachutes to computers referred to as “kit.” nice piece of kit an item particularly good at performing its task in hand. Again it could refer to pretty much anything, though I think you’d be more likely to describe your new camera as a nice piece of kit than, say, your fiancé.

  • Sport
  • Sport

    A disliked individual. Usually if a person is addressed with the word "sport" it denotes uneasiness, dislike or even hostility towards such one. However, if he is your mate, cobber or friend, then he is a "Good Sport"

  • bung
  • bung

    1 v stick; wedge. Push something into something, often something that was not intended for that purpose: Eventually we discovered that it wasn’t working because our son had bunged a Polish sausage into the video recorder. 2 n stopper, often rubber. The type of thing you use to block fluid from coming out of things. 3 n bribe intended to buy silence. A monetary reward given to someone in order to buy their tacit agreement, often associated with the fixing of sports games: Everyone knows that their manager’s taking bungs to throw the matches anyway. 4 – up full of cold; congested: I can’t come into work today, one of the kids is bunged up.

  • Sportin'
  • Sportin'

    To wear an article of clothing or to wear your hair a certain way. "That guy is sportin' the new Air Jordans!" or "That guy is sportin' a new skitch." (see new vocab word for "skitch")

  • potholing
  • potholing

    n caving; spelunking. The sport that involves leaping down holes in the ground. IÂ’m sure that, in a special way, itÂ’s fun. Brits do still refer to chunks that are missing from the road as potholes, in the same way as Americans.

  • sport
  • sport

    affectionate nickname: ‘what do ya know, sport’ (greeting)

  • WATER SPORTS
  • WATER SPORTS

    Water sports is slang for urination as a sex game.

  • SPORTING LIFE
  • SPORTING LIFE

    Sporting life is London Cockney rhyming slang for wife.

  • golf buggy
  • golf buggy

    n golf cart. The device intended to remove the only useful part of golf (some exercise) from the sport.

  • saloon
  • saloon

    n sedan. The cars that, well, arenÂ’t estates or sports cars. The kind your dad and the dentist have. They are called saloons in the U.K. because they usually have wooden swing doors, spittoons and people tend to burst into them waving a gun and saying something about the car not being big enough for two of us. Them. Us. I see why people hate learning English.

  • sport billy
  • sport billy

    Derogatory term for someone interested in sport to the expense of smoking fags/getting hammered on our mate's dad's homebrew etc. From excellent cartoon of same name.

  • BLOOD SPORTS
  • BLOOD SPORTS

    Blood sports is slang for performing cunnilingus on a menstruating woman.

  • prefect
  • prefect

    n a school-child who, having done particularly well academically or on the sports field, is allowed to perform such glorious tasks as making sure everyone behaves properly in the lunch queue, tidying up after school events and showing new pupils around at the weekends. As you may have guessed, I was never a prefect. Bitter? Me?

  • bounder
  • bounder

    n person who is generally no good, a bad egg. It’s very old-fashioned — even Rudyard Kipling would probably have used it in jest. One rather dubious etymology is that it was applied pre–Great War to golfers who used new American golf balls (similar to modern golf balls) instead of the more traditional leather-covered ones. They had a more enthusiastic bounce and the use of such balls was not banned by the rules but was considered bad sportsmanship, perhaps even a little underhanded. The term was originally applied to the ball itself, and only later to the user of such a ball.

  • courgette
  • courgette

    n zucchini. I wonder if thereÂ’s anything behind the fact that these words both look like they ought to be sports cars. IÂ’m sure someoneÂ’s written a thesis on it somewhere.

  • concessions
  • concessions

    n discounts you might get on things if you’ve been there before, are a student, are over sixty or such like. Brits do not use the U.S. definition (snacks you buy during a film or sporting event). Often abbreviated “concs,” to confuse American tourists attending crappy mainstream musicals in the West End.

  • knock about
  • knock about

    n sport practise: Jimmy and I are taking the football to the park for a knockabout.

Wiki AI search on online names & meanings containing CISALFA SPORT

CISALFA SPORT

  • Admiral Sportswear
  • highest position the club has held in the football league. In Italy Cisalfa Sport have the exclusive licence to retail Admiral Performance and Essentials

Online Slangs & meanings of the slang CISALFA SPORT

CISALFA SPORT

  • whoop
  • whoop

    v. To beat up.  "You mad doggin me? I'll whoop you so bad your cousin will cry!"  2. To beat someone in a sport.  "We whooped their team 126 to 57!" 

  • SPORT
  • SPORT

    Sport is slang for close a door so as to indicate that one is busy.

  • kit
  • kit

    n sports uniform (e.g. rugby kit, football kit). More generally in the U.K., kit refers to the equipment necessary to perform a particular task - usually, though not always, sporting. The boundary is woolly to such a degree that it’s difficult to generalise - I’ve heard all sorts of things from parachutes to computers referred to as “kit.” nice piece of kit an item particularly good at performing its task in hand. Again it could refer to pretty much anything, though I think you’d be more likely to describe your new camera as a nice piece of kit than, say, your fiancé.

  • Sport
  • Sport

    A disliked individual. Usually if a person is addressed with the word "sport" it denotes uneasiness, dislike or even hostility towards such one. However, if he is your mate, cobber or friend, then he is a "Good Sport"

  • bung
  • bung

    1 v stick; wedge. Push something into something, often something that was not intended for that purpose: Eventually we discovered that it wasn’t working because our son had bunged a Polish sausage into the video recorder. 2 n stopper, often rubber. The type of thing you use to block fluid from coming out of things. 3 n bribe intended to buy silence. A monetary reward given to someone in order to buy their tacit agreement, often associated with the fixing of sports games: Everyone knows that their manager’s taking bungs to throw the matches anyway. 4 – up full of cold; congested: I can’t come into work today, one of the kids is bunged up.

  • Sportin'
  • Sportin'

    To wear an article of clothing or to wear your hair a certain way. "That guy is sportin' the new Air Jordans!" or "That guy is sportin' a new skitch." (see new vocab word for "skitch")

  • potholing
  • potholing

    n caving; spelunking. The sport that involves leaping down holes in the ground. IÂ’m sure that, in a special way, itÂ’s fun. Brits do still refer to chunks that are missing from the road as potholes, in the same way as Americans.

  • sport
  • sport

    affectionate nickname: ‘what do ya know, sport’ (greeting)

  • WATER SPORTS
  • WATER SPORTS

    Water sports is slang for urination as a sex game.

  • SPORTING LIFE
  • SPORTING LIFE

    Sporting life is London Cockney rhyming slang for wife.

  • golf buggy
  • golf buggy

    n golf cart. The device intended to remove the only useful part of golf (some exercise) from the sport.

  • saloon
  • saloon

    n sedan. The cars that, well, arenÂ’t estates or sports cars. The kind your dad and the dentist have. They are called saloons in the U.K. because they usually have wooden swing doors, spittoons and people tend to burst into them waving a gun and saying something about the car not being big enough for two of us. Them. Us. I see why people hate learning English.

  • sport billy
  • sport billy

    Derogatory term for someone interested in sport to the expense of smoking fags/getting hammered on our mate's dad's homebrew etc. From excellent cartoon of same name.

  • BLOOD SPORTS
  • BLOOD SPORTS

    Blood sports is slang for performing cunnilingus on a menstruating woman.

  • prefect
  • prefect

    n a school-child who, having done particularly well academically or on the sports field, is allowed to perform such glorious tasks as making sure everyone behaves properly in the lunch queue, tidying up after school events and showing new pupils around at the weekends. As you may have guessed, I was never a prefect. Bitter? Me?

  • bounder
  • bounder

    n person who is generally no good, a bad egg. It’s very old-fashioned — even Rudyard Kipling would probably have used it in jest. One rather dubious etymology is that it was applied pre–Great War to golfers who used new American golf balls (similar to modern golf balls) instead of the more traditional leather-covered ones. They had a more enthusiastic bounce and the use of such balls was not banned by the rules but was considered bad sportsmanship, perhaps even a little underhanded. The term was originally applied to the ball itself, and only later to the user of such a ball.

  • courgette
  • courgette

    n zucchini. I wonder if thereÂ’s anything behind the fact that these words both look like they ought to be sports cars. IÂ’m sure someoneÂ’s written a thesis on it somewhere.

  • concessions
  • concessions

    n discounts you might get on things if you’ve been there before, are a student, are over sixty or such like. Brits do not use the U.S. definition (snacks you buy during a film or sporting event). Often abbreviated “concs,” to confuse American tourists attending crappy mainstream musicals in the West End.

  • knock about
  • knock about

    n sport practise: Jimmy and I are taking the football to the park for a knockabout.