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Online Slangs & meanings of slangs

Slangs & AI meanings

  • samey
  • samey

    adj similar: We looked at ten flats that afternoon but they were all just a bit samey.

  • tomato sauce
  • tomato sauce

    n tomato ketchup. In the U.K. these two terms are interchangeable although “tomato ketchup” is in more common use, as tomato sauce could equally easily refer to the pasta-type sauce in a jar or can.

  • brown sauce
  • brown sauce

    n Steak sauce. A mysterious thick brown sort of savoury sauce. Popularly added to burgers, chips and other pub-type food, brown sauce is more than ketchup and less chunky than the American “relish”. I believe it contains vinegar. And probably some other stuff. Also it is brown.

  • savoury
  • savoury

    n non-dessert food. Food such as potatoes, bread and meat are savouries. Things like ice cream and meringues are “sweets,” which is defined elsewhere in this fine work. Probably further on, as it’s supposed to be in alphabetical order.

  • sack
  • sack

    v dismiss; fire: Well, I pretty much knew I was getting sacked as soon as they walked in and saw me on the photocopier. Comes from a time when you were given a sack into which to put the contents of your desk. In the U.S., the term “given the sack” is used sporadically, but not the word sack alone as a verb.

  • 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.

  • jumble sale
  • jumble sale

    n garage sale; yard sale. The wonderful event where people get together in order to sell the revolting tacky rubbish theyÂ’ve accumulated over the years.

  • salty
  • salty

    to have a bad attitude towards someone or something.  "Don't be all salty with me!" 

  • sack
  • sack

    n. A bag (usually a zip lock bag) of marijuana/weed. The term usually is preceded by the dollar amount. *See also the term "dub sack" which refers to $20 worth of marijuana.  "Tonight I'm gonna get faded off this dub sack I just bought."  2. A slang term for the male scrotum. 

  • Sad
  • Sad

    This is a common word, with the same meaning as naff. Used in expressions like "you sad b***ard".

  • sarnie
  • sarnie

    n abbrev sandwich. A little bit slang-ish - you won’t find a “lightly toasted roast beef sarnie served on a fresh bed of rocket” in your average poncy restaurant.

  • safe
  • safe

    adj. Someone who is trustworthy or a friend.  "Don’t worry about Tyrone, that fool safe." 

  • Sack/sacked
  • Sack/sacked

    If someone gets the sack it means they are fired. Then they have been sacked. I can think of a few people I'd like to sack!

  • car boot sale
  • car boot sale

    n merry event where people get together in a field and sell the rubbish from their attic, under the secret suspicion that some part of it might turn out to be splendidly valuable. Not entirely dissimilar to a jumble sale. The term stems no doubt from the fact that this is normally carried out using the boot of your car as a headquarters. This sort of nonsense is now largely replaced by eBay, where you can sell the 1950s engraved brass Hitler moustache replica your father was awarded for twenty yearsÂ’ service in the post office without actually having to meet the freak who bought it.

  • Two finger salute
  • Two finger salute

    When you see a Brit stick up two fingers at you in a V shape, he may be ordering two of something (if his palms are toward you). The other way around and it's an insult along the lines of your one finger salute. Which, by the way, is very popular here now too!

  • say my name
  • say my name

    an exclamation used to intimidate or used for celebration. If someone just scored a touchdown they might say,  "Say my name (insert cruel noun here)!" 

  • jam-sandwich
  • jam-sandwich

    n police car. Also “jam butty.” So called because they are white, with a red stripe down the middle, and therefore are almost indistinguishable from a twelve-foot metal jam sandwich.

  • salad cream
  • salad cream

    n A mixture of mayonnaise and vinegar often put on salads. Perhaps unsurprisingly.

  • Sassenach
  • Sassenach

    n Scottish English person. Gaelic, ultimately derived from Latin “Saxones”, meaning “floppy haired twat with silly accent”.

  • sauced
  • sauced

    To be extremely drunk.  "Man we got sauced last night at that party." 

Wiki AI search on online names & meanings containing GLOBALCAMBIO SA

GLOBALCAMBIO SA

Online Slangs & meanings of the slang GLOBALCAMBIO SA

GLOBALCAMBIO SA

  • samey
  • samey

    adj similar: We looked at ten flats that afternoon but they were all just a bit samey.

  • tomato sauce
  • tomato sauce

    n tomato ketchup. In the U.K. these two terms are interchangeable although “tomato ketchup” is in more common use, as tomato sauce could equally easily refer to the pasta-type sauce in a jar or can.

  • brown sauce
  • brown sauce

    n Steak sauce. A mysterious thick brown sort of savoury sauce. Popularly added to burgers, chips and other pub-type food, brown sauce is more than ketchup and less chunky than the American “relish”. I believe it contains vinegar. And probably some other stuff. Also it is brown.

  • savoury
  • savoury

    n non-dessert food. Food such as potatoes, bread and meat are savouries. Things like ice cream and meringues are “sweets,” which is defined elsewhere in this fine work. Probably further on, as it’s supposed to be in alphabetical order.

  • sack
  • sack

    v dismiss; fire: Well, I pretty much knew I was getting sacked as soon as they walked in and saw me on the photocopier. Comes from a time when you were given a sack into which to put the contents of your desk. In the U.S., the term “given the sack” is used sporadically, but not the word sack alone as a verb.

  • 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.

  • jumble sale
  • jumble sale

    n garage sale; yard sale. The wonderful event where people get together in order to sell the revolting tacky rubbish theyÂ’ve accumulated over the years.

  • salty
  • salty

    to have a bad attitude towards someone or something.  "Don't be all salty with me!" 

  • sack
  • sack

    n. A bag (usually a zip lock bag) of marijuana/weed. The term usually is preceded by the dollar amount. *See also the term "dub sack" which refers to $20 worth of marijuana.  "Tonight I'm gonna get faded off this dub sack I just bought."  2. A slang term for the male scrotum. 

  • Sad
  • Sad

    This is a common word, with the same meaning as naff. Used in expressions like "you sad b***ard".

  • sarnie
  • sarnie

    n abbrev sandwich. A little bit slang-ish - you won’t find a “lightly toasted roast beef sarnie served on a fresh bed of rocket” in your average poncy restaurant.

  • safe
  • safe

    adj. Someone who is trustworthy or a friend.  "Don’t worry about Tyrone, that fool safe." 

  • Sack/sacked
  • Sack/sacked

    If someone gets the sack it means they are fired. Then they have been sacked. I can think of a few people I'd like to sack!

  • car boot sale
  • car boot sale

    n merry event where people get together in a field and sell the rubbish from their attic, under the secret suspicion that some part of it might turn out to be splendidly valuable. Not entirely dissimilar to a jumble sale. The term stems no doubt from the fact that this is normally carried out using the boot of your car as a headquarters. This sort of nonsense is now largely replaced by eBay, where you can sell the 1950s engraved brass Hitler moustache replica your father was awarded for twenty yearsÂ’ service in the post office without actually having to meet the freak who bought it.

  • Two finger salute
  • Two finger salute

    When you see a Brit stick up two fingers at you in a V shape, he may be ordering two of something (if his palms are toward you). The other way around and it's an insult along the lines of your one finger salute. Which, by the way, is very popular here now too!

  • say my name
  • say my name

    an exclamation used to intimidate or used for celebration. If someone just scored a touchdown they might say,  "Say my name (insert cruel noun here)!" 

  • jam-sandwich
  • jam-sandwich

    n police car. Also “jam butty.” So called because they are white, with a red stripe down the middle, and therefore are almost indistinguishable from a twelve-foot metal jam sandwich.

  • salad cream
  • salad cream

    n A mixture of mayonnaise and vinegar often put on salads. Perhaps unsurprisingly.

  • Sassenach
  • Sassenach

    n Scottish English person. Gaelic, ultimately derived from Latin “Saxones”, meaning “floppy haired twat with silly accent”.

  • sauced
  • sauced

    To be extremely drunk.  "Man we got sauced last night at that party."Â