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Online Slangs & meanings of slangs

Slangs & AI meanings

  • Not Me Chief, I'm Comm School
  • Not Me Chief, I'm Comm School

    At recruit school at HMCS/CFB Cornwallis, all new entries were required to double everywhere on base. Anyone not moving at double time would be admonished. A common expression used at the time was "Not me Chief, I'm Comm School." This term has carried forward through the years and is often used by someone that feels they should be exempt from a particular duty or tasking.

  • Tot
  • Tot

    A rum ration consisting of a half-gill measure of Pusser's Rum. At one time, it was a daily issue on HMC Ships, however that tradition ened on 30 March 1972.

  • HML
  • HML

    You are thinking of what to say or you are skeptical about what someone said to you.

  • Maggie (the)
  • Maggie (the)

    HMCS MAGNIFICENT, and aircraft carrier that served in the Canadian navy in the post-war era.

  • tarmac
  • tarmac

    n blacktop. The stuff that covers roads. Perhaps you’d like to hear some road-making history? Hmm? Or perhaps not. Perhaps you’re sitting in bed naked, waiting for your husband to finish in the shower. Perhaps you’re on a train in a strange foreign country, hoping that this stupid book was going to be much more of a tour guide than it turned out to be. Perhaps you’re having a shit. Well, bucko, whatever you’re doing you’re stuck now, and so you’re going to hear a little bit of road-making history. A long time ago, a Scotsman named John Loudon Macadam invented a way of surfacing roads with gravel, this coating being known as “Macadam” - a term also used in the U.S. “What happens when the road aged?,” I hear you say. Well, I’m so glad you asked. Unfortunately as the road aged the gravel tended to grind to dust and so it was coated with a layer of tar - this being “Tar-Macadam,” which was concatenated to tarmac. Somewhere in the mists of time the Americans ended up using this only to describe airport runways, but the Brits still use it to describe the road surface.

  • Miss HMCS _____ Contest
  • Miss HMCS _____ Contest

    An impromptu beauty contest held on HMC ships. Oddly enough, even in the days when the entire ship's company consisted of men there were usually enough bikinis and evening gowns onboard to properly outfit the contestants.

  • Queens Harbour Master
  • Queens Harbour Master

    The Officer responsible for the safety, navigation and general organization of an HMC Dockyard. Abbreviated QHM.

  • HMFIC
  • HMFIC

    Head MOFO In Charge

  • Ship's Colours
  • Ship's Colours

    Every HMC Ship is assigned official colours, which are also displayed in the nameplate area of the Ship's official badge.

  • Stad
  • Stad

    The large barrack block in the upper part of CFB Halifax named HMCS STADACONA.

  • Spikenard's Spike
  • Spikenard's Spike

    In 1942, the Commanding Officer of HMCS Spikenard drove a six-inch spike into the deckhead of the Crowsnest Club in St. John's Newfoundland. Subsequently, on a convoy later that year, the corvette was torpedoed and lost, with only eight survivors. The spike remained in the Crowsnest Club for many years.

  • HM
  • HM

    Hardmode. Can be mistaken for Her Majesty the Queen.

  • HMU
  • HMU

    Hit Me Up

  • 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.

  • HMCS
  • HMCS

    Her Majesty's Canadian Ship. Designates a commissioned warship in the service of Canada.

  • HM 
  • HM 

    (abrv.) (n. and a.) Haukke Manor. Could also refer to 'Hard Mode' (the Hard versions of Dungeons/Trials.)

  • Tumult
  • Tumult

    The name of the damage control structure at CFB Esquimalt Fire Fighting/Damage Control School. Its actual name was HMCS TUMULT. It is no longer in use.

  • Bonnie (the)
  • Bonnie (the)

    HMCS BONAVENTURE, and aircraft carrier that served in the Canadian Navy in the 1960s.

  • blow off
  • blow off

    v break wind (rather old-fashioned): My goodness, is that Deardrie cooking breakfast again? / Hmm, no, I think the dogÂ’s blown off. Brits do not use the American meaning (to brush off).

  • HMU
  • HMU

    Hit My Line.

Wiki AI search on online names & meanings containing HM

HM

  • HM
  • Look up HM, hm, or .hm in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. HM or hm may refer to: HM (magazine), a Christian hard rock magazine H&M, a Swedish clothing

  • .hm
  • .hm is the Internet country code top-level domain (ccTLD) of the Heard and McDonald Islands, uninhabited islands in the southern Indian Ocean under the

  • HM Treasury
  • His Majesty's Treasury (HM Treasury), occasionally referred to as the Exchequer, or more informally the Treasury, is a ministerial department of the Government

  • HM Prison Frankland
  • HM Prison Frankland is a Category A men's prison located in the village of Brasside in County Durham, England. Frankland is operated by His Majesty's Prison

  • HM Prison Belmarsh
  • Carrick (moved to HM Prison Full Sutton) Anjem Choudary Wayne Couzens (moved to HM Prison Frankland) Richard Huckle (later moved to HM Prison Full Sutton

  • HM Prison Highland
  • HM Prison Highland is a prison under construction in the Highlands of Scotland. It will replace HM Prison Inverness. In November 2022, the construction

  • HM Prison Dumfries
  • HM Prison Dumfries services the courts of Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland. The establishment serves as a local community prison that holds adult and under

  • Mary I of England
  • Mary I (18 February 1516 – 17 November 1558), also known as Mary Tudor, was Queen of England and Ireland from July 1553 and Queen of Spain as the wife

  • HM Prison Liverpool
  • HM Prison Liverpool (formerly Walton Gaol) is a category B local men's prison in Walton, Liverpool, England. It is operated by His Majesty's Prison Service

  • HM Prison Wandsworth
  • HM Prison Wandsworth is a Category B men's prison at Wandsworth in the London Borough of Wandsworth, South West London, England. It is operated by His

Online Slangs & meanings of the slang HM

HM

  • Not Me Chief, I'm Comm School
  • Not Me Chief, I'm Comm School

    At recruit school at HMCS/CFB Cornwallis, all new entries were required to double everywhere on base. Anyone not moving at double time would be admonished. A common expression used at the time was "Not me Chief, I'm Comm School." This term has carried forward through the years and is often used by someone that feels they should be exempt from a particular duty or tasking.

  • Tot
  • Tot

    A rum ration consisting of a half-gill measure of Pusser's Rum. At one time, it was a daily issue on HMC Ships, however that tradition ened on 30 March 1972.

  • HML
  • HML

    You are thinking of what to say or you are skeptical about what someone said to you.

  • Maggie (the)
  • Maggie (the)

    HMCS MAGNIFICENT, and aircraft carrier that served in the Canadian navy in the post-war era.

  • tarmac
  • tarmac

    n blacktop. The stuff that covers roads. Perhaps you’d like to hear some road-making history? Hmm? Or perhaps not. Perhaps you’re sitting in bed naked, waiting for your husband to finish in the shower. Perhaps you’re on a train in a strange foreign country, hoping that this stupid book was going to be much more of a tour guide than it turned out to be. Perhaps you’re having a shit. Well, bucko, whatever you’re doing you’re stuck now, and so you’re going to hear a little bit of road-making history. A long time ago, a Scotsman named John Loudon Macadam invented a way of surfacing roads with gravel, this coating being known as “Macadam” - a term also used in the U.S. “What happens when the road aged?,” I hear you say. Well, I’m so glad you asked. Unfortunately as the road aged the gravel tended to grind to dust and so it was coated with a layer of tar - this being “Tar-Macadam,” which was concatenated to tarmac. Somewhere in the mists of time the Americans ended up using this only to describe airport runways, but the Brits still use it to describe the road surface.

  • Miss HMCS _____ Contest
  • Miss HMCS _____ Contest

    An impromptu beauty contest held on HMC ships. Oddly enough, even in the days when the entire ship's company consisted of men there were usually enough bikinis and evening gowns onboard to properly outfit the contestants.

  • Queens Harbour Master
  • Queens Harbour Master

    The Officer responsible for the safety, navigation and general organization of an HMC Dockyard. Abbreviated QHM.

  • HMFIC
  • HMFIC

    Head MOFO In Charge

  • Ship's Colours
  • Ship's Colours

    Every HMC Ship is assigned official colours, which are also displayed in the nameplate area of the Ship's official badge.

  • Stad
  • Stad

    The large barrack block in the upper part of CFB Halifax named HMCS STADACONA.

  • Spikenard's Spike
  • Spikenard's Spike

    In 1942, the Commanding Officer of HMCS Spikenard drove a six-inch spike into the deckhead of the Crowsnest Club in St. John's Newfoundland. Subsequently, on a convoy later that year, the corvette was torpedoed and lost, with only eight survivors. The spike remained in the Crowsnest Club for many years.

  • HM
  • HM

    Hardmode. Can be mistaken for Her Majesty the Queen.

  • HMU
  • HMU

    Hit Me Up

  • 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.

  • HMCS
  • HMCS

    Her Majesty's Canadian Ship. Designates a commissioned warship in the service of Canada.

  • HM 
  • HM 

    (abrv.) (n. and a.) Haukke Manor. Could also refer to 'Hard Mode' (the Hard versions of Dungeons/Trials.)

  • Tumult
  • Tumult

    The name of the damage control structure at CFB Esquimalt Fire Fighting/Damage Control School. Its actual name was HMCS TUMULT. It is no longer in use.

  • Bonnie (the)
  • Bonnie (the)

    HMCS BONAVENTURE, and aircraft carrier that served in the Canadian Navy in the 1960s.

  • blow off
  • blow off

    v break wind (rather old-fashioned): My goodness, is that Deardrie cooking breakfast again? / Hmm, no, I think the dogÂ’s blown off. Brits do not use the American meaning (to brush off).

  • HMU
  • HMU

    Hit My Line.