AI & ChatGPT job searches for LAWRCON ELECTRIC

Jobs LAWRCON ELECTRIC. jobs for LAWRCON ELECTRIC

Jobs LAWRCON ELECTRIC!

Find jobs, jobs near me, LAWRCON ELECTRIC

Local jobs, jobs near me

Online Slangs & meanings of slangs

Slangs & AI meanings

  • gaffer
  • gaffer

    n bloke in charge. Originally the foreman of a construction site, but can be used universally. In the film industry, the gaffer is the setÂ’s chief electrician, in charge of pretty much anything with wires attached to it. This may or may not be relevant.

  • bollard
  • bollard

    n small concrete or metal post generally used to stop cars from driving into certain places. While used only in a nautical context in the U.S., it is accepted universally in the U.K. When not on boats, Americans call them “pylons,” which to Brits are the giant metal structures used to hold up national grid electricity wires.

  • earth
  • earth

    n ground. Only in the electrical context – this is the wire that zooms off into the planet somewhere and somehow stops people from electrocuting themselves in the bath.

  • clutch
  • clutch

    v. to be able to perform under extreme pressure.  "Did you see LaBron hit that winning shot in the last second? Fool that was so clutch!" 

  • demister
  • demister

    n defroster. The little network of electrical wires that weave around your carÂ’s rear window and are intended to remove frost. They are perhaps referred to as such in the U.K. because any devices attached to British-built cars have precious little chance of getting rid of frost, and, indeed, donÂ’t stand much of a chance against mist, either.

  • bunnies
  • bunnies

    The ability to jump high, vertical abilities, up’s  "Jamal gots them bunnies like LaBron." 

  • fairy lights
  • fairy lights

    n Christmas lights. IÂ’d like to describe these by reading from an entry in a fictional encyclopaedia for aliens: Human beings celebrate Christmas by cutting the top off a tree, moving it to a pot in their living room, covering it with small electrical lights and standing a small model of a woman on its tip. As it dies, they drink alcohol, sing to it and give it gifts.

  • BACON LARDON
  • BACON LARDON

    Bacon lardon is London Cockney rhyming slang for an erection (hard on).

  • struck off
  • struck off

    v removed from a registered position of responsibility, usually the General Medical Council: Well, we were pretty sure sheÂ’d get struck off after the whole thing with the electric toothbrush and that poor man in the wheelchair. The term gave its name to the BBC radio medical comedy, Struck Off and Die.

  • ELECTRIC SOUP
  • ELECTRIC SOUP

    Electric soup is slang for alcoholic drink.

  • bog standard
  • bog standard

    n no frills. The basic version. So your “bog standard” Volkswagen Golf would be one that doesn’t have electric windows, power steering or opposable thumbs. Well, nowadays a bog-standard Golf probably does have two thirds of those things. There’s no particular reason to believe that the term has anything to do with a toilet (see “bog”).

  • mental
  • mental

    adj insane; crazy: It was kind of romantic to start with, but as soon as I turned on the electric toothbrush he went mental.

  • gaffer tape
  • gaffer tape

    n duct tape. Sort of. The heavy, slightly meshed sticky tape used to silence potential murder victims and to reliably and effectively attach small animals to tables. Unlike duct tape, gaffer tape is designed not to melt onto things, and is used extensively in the theatre and film industry. Probably derived from the fact that the Gaffer is the chief electrician on a film set.

  • tram
  • tram

    n streetcar; trolley. A device very much like a train except it generally runs on tracks built on top of normal roads and is often powered electrically by high-strung cables (I mean ones on poles, not ones of an excitable disposition). Trams are making something of a comeback in Europe generally, with new systems springing up in the U.K.

Wiki AI search on online names & meanings containing LAWRCON ELECTRIC

LAWRCON ELECTRIC

Online Slangs & meanings of the slang LAWRCON ELECTRIC

LAWRCON ELECTRIC

  • gaffer
  • gaffer

    n bloke in charge. Originally the foreman of a construction site, but can be used universally. In the film industry, the gaffer is the setÂ’s chief electrician, in charge of pretty much anything with wires attached to it. This may or may not be relevant.

  • bollard
  • bollard

    n small concrete or metal post generally used to stop cars from driving into certain places. While used only in a nautical context in the U.S., it is accepted universally in the U.K. When not on boats, Americans call them “pylons,” which to Brits are the giant metal structures used to hold up national grid electricity wires.

  • earth
  • earth

    n ground. Only in the electrical context – this is the wire that zooms off into the planet somewhere and somehow stops people from electrocuting themselves in the bath.

  • clutch
  • clutch

    v. to be able to perform under extreme pressure.  "Did you see LaBron hit that winning shot in the last second? Fool that was so clutch!" 

  • demister
  • demister

    n defroster. The little network of electrical wires that weave around your carÂ’s rear window and are intended to remove frost. They are perhaps referred to as such in the U.K. because any devices attached to British-built cars have precious little chance of getting rid of frost, and, indeed, donÂ’t stand much of a chance against mist, either.

  • bunnies
  • bunnies

    The ability to jump high, vertical abilities, up’s  "Jamal gots them bunnies like LaBron." 

  • fairy lights
  • fairy lights

    n Christmas lights. IÂ’d like to describe these by reading from an entry in a fictional encyclopaedia for aliens: Human beings celebrate Christmas by cutting the top off a tree, moving it to a pot in their living room, covering it with small electrical lights and standing a small model of a woman on its tip. As it dies, they drink alcohol, sing to it and give it gifts.

  • BACON LARDON
  • BACON LARDON

    Bacon lardon is London Cockney rhyming slang for an erection (hard on).

  • struck off
  • struck off

    v removed from a registered position of responsibility, usually the General Medical Council: Well, we were pretty sure sheÂ’d get struck off after the whole thing with the electric toothbrush and that poor man in the wheelchair. The term gave its name to the BBC radio medical comedy, Struck Off and Die.

  • ELECTRIC SOUP
  • ELECTRIC SOUP

    Electric soup is slang for alcoholic drink.

  • bog standard
  • bog standard

    n no frills. The basic version. So your “bog standard” Volkswagen Golf would be one that doesn’t have electric windows, power steering or opposable thumbs. Well, nowadays a bog-standard Golf probably does have two thirds of those things. There’s no particular reason to believe that the term has anything to do with a toilet (see “bog”).

  • mental
  • mental

    adj insane; crazy: It was kind of romantic to start with, but as soon as I turned on the electric toothbrush he went mental.

  • gaffer tape
  • gaffer tape

    n duct tape. Sort of. The heavy, slightly meshed sticky tape used to silence potential murder victims and to reliably and effectively attach small animals to tables. Unlike duct tape, gaffer tape is designed not to melt onto things, and is used extensively in the theatre and film industry. Probably derived from the fact that the Gaffer is the chief electrician on a film set.

  • tram
  • tram

    n streetcar; trolley. A device very much like a train except it generally runs on tracks built on top of normal roads and is often powered electrically by high-strung cables (I mean ones on poles, not ones of an excitable disposition). Trams are making something of a comeback in Europe generally, with new systems springing up in the U.K.