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Online Slangs & meanings of slangs

Slangs & AI meanings

  • YOLO
  • YOLO

    An acronym for "You Only Live Once". A term often employed after making an irrational or snap decision.  "I decided to eat twenty-four cheeseburgers. YOLO!" 

  • 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.

  • sod
  • sod

    1 n, v, adj generic word signifying displeasure. Attached to any word or phrase it has the immediate effect of making it derogatory. Sod off get lost. sod you bite me. sod it damn it; forget it. old sod old git, etc, etc. Use at will - it has a friendly tone to it and is unlikely to get you into trouble. 2 n a lump of turf (universal).

  • making cookies
  • making cookies

    having sex. Usually used as a code term to warn friends not to come by and interrupt. 

  • slippin'
  • slippin'

    adv. making mistakes  "Next time I catch Terry slippin on his game I'm gonna swoop in and pull Jackie cause she too fine." 

  • 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.

  • Pitching woo, making whoopee
  • Pitching woo, making whoopee

    Making love

  • bally
  • bally

    adj darned. A very old-fashioned minor swear word, muck akin to a lighter version of “bloody”: I say, Edward! I think that ruffian is making off with your bally wallet!

  • score
  • score

    v. A term used in reference to succeeding in the aim to have sex with another person.  "I think I'm gonna score with Angel tonight."  2. n. a term used to reference making fun of someone.  "I can't believe you let Fat Boi score on you like that; that was hilarious." 

  • mean muggin
  • mean muggin

    v. When someone looks hard at you or passes on a dirty look as if they’re ‘hating on you.’  "Man, dude was mean muggin when he fount out you was makin' cookies wit his ol-G."  Lyrical reference: B.G.’s MOVE AROUND - I Am What I AM Album: Heart of the Streetz, Vol.2, 2006  I hold it down, never bound, out of state thuggin'I don't be trippin when the haters go to mean-muggin' (muggin')I keep a strap in the hand so I keep stuntin' (stuntin') 

  • 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?

  • taking the piss
  • taking the piss

    n make fun of: Andy fell down the stairs on the way into the pub last night, and everyone spent the entire night taking the piss out of him. This is the most common term in British English to describe making fun of someone. Contrary to what one might assume, it doesnÂ’t involve a complex system of tubes or a bicycle pump.

  • swizz
  • swizz

    n a small-scale swindle or con. If you opened your eight-pack of KitKats and there were only seven, you might mutter “that’s a bloody swizz.” If you discovered that your cleaning lady had been making out large cheques to herself over a ten year period, you’d be inclined to use stronger wording.

  • snow
  • snow

    n. Cocaine or Coke, term derived from the fluffy white and flaky simularities that cocaine has in common with snow.  "Yo stop drawing attention over here; Rae’s upstairs making that snow son." 

  • redundant
  • redundant

    n laid off. Make redundant lay off: Unless things start picking up pretty soon weÂ’re going to have to start making people redundant.

  • lad
  • lad

    n 1 young boy. 2 bloke doing blokey things, generally including but not limited to getting pissed (in the U.K. sense); trying to pull birds; making a lot of noise and causing some good wholesome criminal damage. Various derivations have sprung up, with “laddish” covering this type of behaviour and “laddettes” being girls doing much the same thing.

  • gunnin'
  • gunnin'

    Sam as "cappin" on someone. When you're "gunnin", you are making fun of someone or something.  "Dude was gunnin' on your ride(car)." 

  • joaning/joanin'
  • joaning/joanin'

    v. another term for joking around and or making fun of someone in a playful manner.  "After the game, on the bus ride home, we was all joaning on each other about our mammas." 

  • aggro
  • aggro

    n aggression; trouble: Hey, you! Stop making faces at that guy outside with the knife – we don’t want any aggro around here!

  • taking the mickey
  • taking the mickey

    interj making fun of; laughing at. Essentially a more polite version of “taking the piss.” Your grandmother would be much more likely to use this variant.

Wiki AI search on online names & meanings containing MAKI

MAKI

  • Maki
  • Look up maki or Maki in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Maki may refer to: Mäki, a Finnish surname (includes a list of people with the name) Maki (name)

  • Ally Maki
  • Ally Maki Matsumura (born December 29, 1986), known professionally as Ally Maki, is an American actress and former musician. She portrayed Jess Kato in

  • Maki (singer)
  • Ralph William Datoon (born November 27, 1999), professionally known as Maki, is a Filipino singer and songwriter from Quezon City. He first gained attention

  • Maki Zen'in
  • Maki Zen'in (Japanese: 禪院 真希, Hepburn: Zen'in Maki) is a fictional character from Gege Akutami's manga Jujutsu Kaisen 0. She is a young student from Jujutsu

  • Maki-e
  • Maki-e (蒔絵, literally: sprinkled picture (or design)) is a Japanese lacquer decoration technique in which pictures, patterns, and letters are drawn with

  • Maki (political party)
  • The Communist Party of Israel, commonly known by its Hebrew abbreviation Maki (Hebrew: מק״י), is a communist political party in Israel that forms part

  • Sushi
  • (takuan) in shinko maki, pickled vegetables (tsukemono), fermented soybeans (nattō) in nattō maki, avocado, cucumber in kappa maki, asparagus, yam, pickled

  • List of Death Note characters
  • traced Maki's whereabouts and there, Maki faces them alone in a corridor. Filled with hatred towards Kujo for causing her father's death, Maki injected

  • Hōjō Maki
  • Hōjō Maki may refer to: Hōjō Maki (北条 牧, 牧の方), also Hōjō no Maki, wife of Hōjō Tokimasa, the first Shikken of Japan, and mother of Hōjō Masako the wife

  • Maki, Niigata
  • Maki, Niigata may refer to: Maki, Niigata (Kanbara) (巻町; -machi), Nishikanbara District, Niigata, Japan Maki, Niigata (Kubiki) (牧村; -mura), Higashikubiki

Online Slangs & meanings of the slang MAKI

MAKI

  • YOLO
  • YOLO

    An acronym for "You Only Live Once". A term often employed after making an irrational or snap decision.  "I decided to eat twenty-four cheeseburgers. YOLO!" 

  • 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.

  • sod
  • sod

    1 n, v, adj generic word signifying displeasure. Attached to any word or phrase it has the immediate effect of making it derogatory. Sod off get lost. sod you bite me. sod it damn it; forget it. old sod old git, etc, etc. Use at will - it has a friendly tone to it and is unlikely to get you into trouble. 2 n a lump of turf (universal).

  • making cookies
  • making cookies

    having sex. Usually used as a code term to warn friends not to come by and interrupt. 

  • slippin'
  • slippin'

    adv. making mistakes  "Next time I catch Terry slippin on his game I'm gonna swoop in and pull Jackie cause she too fine." 

  • 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.

  • Pitching woo, making whoopee
  • Pitching woo, making whoopee

    Making love

  • bally
  • bally

    adj darned. A very old-fashioned minor swear word, muck akin to a lighter version of “bloody”: I say, Edward! I think that ruffian is making off with your bally wallet!

  • score
  • score

    v. A term used in reference to succeeding in the aim to have sex with another person.  "I think I'm gonna score with Angel tonight."  2. n. a term used to reference making fun of someone.  "I can't believe you let Fat Boi score on you like that; that was hilarious." 

  • mean muggin
  • mean muggin

    v. When someone looks hard at you or passes on a dirty look as if they’re ‘hating on you.’  "Man, dude was mean muggin when he fount out you was makin' cookies wit his ol-G."  Lyrical reference: B.G.’s MOVE AROUND - I Am What I AM Album: Heart of the Streetz, Vol.2, 2006  I hold it down, never bound, out of state thuggin'I don't be trippin when the haters go to mean-muggin' (muggin')I keep a strap in the hand so I keep stuntin' (stuntin') 

  • 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?

  • taking the piss
  • taking the piss

    n make fun of: Andy fell down the stairs on the way into the pub last night, and everyone spent the entire night taking the piss out of him. This is the most common term in British English to describe making fun of someone. Contrary to what one might assume, it doesnÂ’t involve a complex system of tubes or a bicycle pump.

  • swizz
  • swizz

    n a small-scale swindle or con. If you opened your eight-pack of KitKats and there were only seven, you might mutter “that’s a bloody swizz.” If you discovered that your cleaning lady had been making out large cheques to herself over a ten year period, you’d be inclined to use stronger wording.

  • snow
  • snow

    n. Cocaine or Coke, term derived from the fluffy white and flaky simularities that cocaine has in common with snow.  "Yo stop drawing attention over here; Rae’s upstairs making that snow son." 

  • redundant
  • redundant

    n laid off. Make redundant lay off: Unless things start picking up pretty soon weÂ’re going to have to start making people redundant.

  • lad
  • lad

    n 1 young boy. 2 bloke doing blokey things, generally including but not limited to getting pissed (in the U.K. sense); trying to pull birds; making a lot of noise and causing some good wholesome criminal damage. Various derivations have sprung up, with “laddish” covering this type of behaviour and “laddettes” being girls doing much the same thing.

  • gunnin'
  • gunnin'

    Sam as "cappin" on someone. When you're "gunnin", you are making fun of someone or something.  "Dude was gunnin' on your ride(car)." 

  • joaning/joanin'
  • joaning/joanin'

    v. another term for joking around and or making fun of someone in a playful manner.  "After the game, on the bus ride home, we was all joaning on each other about our mammas." 

  • aggro
  • aggro

    n aggression; trouble: Hey, you! Stop making faces at that guy outside with the knife – we don’t want any aggro around here!

  • taking the mickey
  • taking the mickey

    interj making fun of; laughing at. Essentially a more polite version of “taking the piss.” Your grandmother would be much more likely to use this variant.