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Online Slangs & meanings of slangs

Slangs & AI meanings

  • KTown
  • KTown

    An abbreviation for the city Kingston ON. Other cities starting with K copied it.

  • Kingsman
  • Kingsman

        A coloured or black handkerchief.

  • TOWN
  • TOWN

    Town is Jamaican slang for Kingston.

  • manners
  • manners

    'Manners' was a term used to point out that another kid was inferior to you, in the way they dressed, at sports, physically, or just in general. If you were 'under manners' this could also mean that you were in trouble, or being watched by a teacher in class, so had to be quiet. Obviously, it was used to tease and show that you could still continue to behave badly, whilst they were - indeed - 'under manners', I heard this all through secondary school. Incidentally, my school - Quintin Kynaston - was the school that Graham McPherson, 'Suggs' from Madness went to, and wrote the song 'Baggy Trousers' about! (ed: another bit of history recorded for posterity!)

  • REVERSE WINSTON
  • REVERSE WINSTON

    Reverse Winston is British slang for a V sign.

  • Harsh
  • Harsh

    Can either mean cold, or someone who's really hot, as in "How was that Trig test?" "Oh, harsh, man! Dr. Barnes is tough!" or " did you see that new babe in Physics?" "Yeah, she's way harsh, man!" I first heard this term back in 1983 on the West Coast, so its' usage may have been somewhat regionalized.

  • BARNES WALLIS
  • BARNES WALLIS

    Barnes Wallis is British slang for a splashing piece of excrement.

  • vick
  • vick

    "Flick the vick". To stick your two fingers up at someone in an manner meant to be insulting. e.g. "I gave that maths teacher the vick this morning."'V' sign using two fingers has long been a signal of contempt. It originated during the interminable wars between the English and the French. The French were in awe of the English longbow-men. If the French managed to capture any of the bowmen, their practice was to sever the two "string" fingers of the right hand thus rendering them permanently incapable of using a bow.It thus became a symbol of contempt and derision for those English bowmen who still possessed their fingers, to wave them at the opposing side.During World War Two, Winston Churchill used it either way round, to signify "victory", and the shortened somewhat "politer" name of the action has since dropped into common useage since as "the vick", though the original expression "flick the vees" is still used in alongside the newer term.

  • PORT WINSTON
  • PORT WINSTON

    Port Winston was slang for the mulberry harbour at Arromanches in Normandy, France during theSecond World War.

  • flea dart
  • flea dart

    Wild grass found on school playing fields, usually with fleas resident. Plucked and thrown at poor children to emphasise their lack of worth. (St Agatha's RC Primary School, Kingston).

  • bolt-hole
  • bolt-hole

    n sanctuary; place one runs to when in trouble or wanting to hide. One might hear it used to describe Winston ChurchillÂ’s country retreat, or some such.

Wiki AI search on online names & meanings containing KINGSTON BARNES

KINGSTON BARNES

  • Ben Barnes (actor)
  • an album, both of which did not materialise. Barnes then studied English literature and drama at Kingston University, appearing and directing in productions

  • Kingston University
  • Kingston University London is a public research university located within the Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames, in South West London, England. Its

  • Barnes, London
  • southwest towards Teddington and Kingston. Barnes railway station saw 2,548 million passenger entries or exits in 2018. Barnes Bridge was significantly quieter

  • Roehampton
  • and Kingston). Barnes and Putney are the nearest railway stations. Roehampton University has campaigned to have nearby Barnes station renamed Barnes & Roehampton

  • Kingston upon Thames
  • Kingston upon Thames, colloquially known as Kingston, is a town in the Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames, south-west London, England. It is situated

  • Richmond Park (UK Parliament constituency)
  • created in 1997 from Richmond and Barnes, held by Jeremy Hanley of the Conservative Party; and a northern section of Kingston upon Thames, held by his party

  • John Barnes
  • John Charles Bryan Barnes MBE (born 7 November 1963) is a former professional football player and manager. Often considered one of the greatest England

  • Zandrion Barnes
  • Zandrion Barnes (born 17 August 2001) is a Jamaican track and field athlete who competes over 400 metres. Barnes reached final of the 400 metres at the

  • The Kingston Trio
  • The Kingston Trio is an American folk and pop music group that helped launch the folk revival of the late 1950s to the late 1960s. The group started as

  • Barnes Bay, Tasmania
  • south (by ferry) of the town of Kingston. The 2016 census recorded a population of 22 for the state suburb of Barnes Bay. It is both a geographical feature

Online Slangs & meanings of the slang KINGSTON BARNES

KINGSTON BARNES

  • KTown
  • KTown

    An abbreviation for the city Kingston ON. Other cities starting with K copied it.

  • Kingsman
  • Kingsman

        A coloured or black handkerchief.

  • TOWN
  • TOWN

    Town is Jamaican slang for Kingston.

  • manners
  • manners

    'Manners' was a term used to point out that another kid was inferior to you, in the way they dressed, at sports, physically, or just in general. If you were 'under manners' this could also mean that you were in trouble, or being watched by a teacher in class, so had to be quiet. Obviously, it was used to tease and show that you could still continue to behave badly, whilst they were - indeed - 'under manners', I heard this all through secondary school. Incidentally, my school - Quintin Kynaston - was the school that Graham McPherson, 'Suggs' from Madness went to, and wrote the song 'Baggy Trousers' about! (ed: another bit of history recorded for posterity!)

  • REVERSE WINSTON
  • REVERSE WINSTON

    Reverse Winston is British slang for a V sign.

  • Harsh
  • Harsh

    Can either mean cold, or someone who's really hot, as in "How was that Trig test?" "Oh, harsh, man! Dr. Barnes is tough!" or " did you see that new babe in Physics?" "Yeah, she's way harsh, man!" I first heard this term back in 1983 on the West Coast, so its' usage may have been somewhat regionalized.

  • BARNES WALLIS
  • BARNES WALLIS

    Barnes Wallis is British slang for a splashing piece of excrement.

  • vick
  • vick

    "Flick the vick". To stick your two fingers up at someone in an manner meant to be insulting. e.g. "I gave that maths teacher the vick this morning."'V' sign using two fingers has long been a signal of contempt. It originated during the interminable wars between the English and the French. The French were in awe of the English longbow-men. If the French managed to capture any of the bowmen, their practice was to sever the two "string" fingers of the right hand thus rendering them permanently incapable of using a bow.It thus became a symbol of contempt and derision for those English bowmen who still possessed their fingers, to wave them at the opposing side.During World War Two, Winston Churchill used it either way round, to signify "victory", and the shortened somewhat "politer" name of the action has since dropped into common useage since as "the vick", though the original expression "flick the vees" is still used in alongside the newer term.

  • PORT WINSTON
  • PORT WINSTON

    Port Winston was slang for the mulberry harbour at Arromanches in Normandy, France during theSecond World War.

  • flea dart
  • flea dart

    Wild grass found on school playing fields, usually with fleas resident. Plucked and thrown at poor children to emphasise their lack of worth. (St Agatha's RC Primary School, Kingston).

  • bolt-hole
  • bolt-hole

    n sanctuary; place one runs to when in trouble or wanting to hide. One might hear it used to describe Winston ChurchillÂ’s country retreat, or some such.