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Online Slangs & meanings of slangs

Slangs & AI meanings

  • REGINALD DENNY
  • REGINALD DENNY

    Reginald Denny was mid−th century London Cockney rhyming slang for a penny.

  • fock, focking
  • fock, focking

    Regional variation of fuck, fucking. Same meaning, i.e. the act of sexual intercourse. Pronunciation differences in area of Plymouth.

  • Footie
  • Footie

    regional term for either Australian Rules Football, or Rugby League or Union!

  • bock, bok
  • bock, bok

    To break, dismantle, disassemble, trash. Regional dialect word used in schools around Plymouth.

  • Five by Five
  • Five by Five

    Currently used as an affirmative response - i.e. a complete interjective sentence ("Five by Five!") or as an adjective ("I'm five by five with that"). Meaning: everything's okay, under control, copacetic, hunky-dory, etc. Was in use in the movie Aliens (1986) nd was a hallmark of the character "Faith" from Buffy: the Vampire Slayer, which marks its passage into general understanding. However it was in use far earlier that either of those with a specific purpose and rationale for its existence. The phrase dates back to World War II, originating from radio voice communications. When operators used to talk to each other they first used the phrase “loud and clear” to describe their reception among each other. With a desire to be more precise, they adopted a numerical scale from one to five. Shortly thereafter, these radio operators incorporated the phrase 'five by five' ('five out of five for volume and clarity' i.e. 'loud and clear.'). So '5 by 5 means 'I hear you loud and clear.' Certainly was in common use in exactly this way in the US Army during the Vietnam war. Certainly was in common use in exactly this way in the US Army during the Vietnam war. (ed: we are interested in knowing if the phrase is any older than 1986?) We ask and we receive - seems Stephen heard it in use in (of all places) the 'Thunderbirds' puppet show in the 1960's.

  • Patois
  • Patois

    Regional dialect; a regional form of a language, used informally and usually containing elements regarded as nonstandard.

  • kevin, kev
  • kevin, kev

    A male of a low socio-economic class with reluctant facial hair who drives a Ford Escort, has an underage girlfriend, and wears lots of sports gear. More specific than a NED, they would take their cars to local parks to pracice handbreak turns etc. The contributor has researched this word quite extensively and offers some regional variations: JAMMER (East Birmingham) CHARVER (Newcastle and Carlisle) DUSTBIN (Tamworth) In North Birmingham the female equivalent was called a SHARON/SHAZ/SHAZZA.

  • nought
  • nought

    n pron. “nawt” the digit zero. It’s an Old English word meaning “nothing” still used in northern regional English. Also occasionally used in the U.S., along with its more common American sibling, “aught.”

  • jagoff, jerkoff, jackoff
  • jagoff, jerkoff, jackoff

    Regional term used heavily in the Chicago area. Refers to one who is useless, clueless, or generally an idiot. e.g. "The guy in the '89 Mustang with the mullet is SUCH a jagoff". Possibly a USA translation of the Euro-Yiddish term "schmuck", but more likely derived similarly to terms such as "wanker" etc.

  • gevert
  • gevert

    n. (regional) a really long period of time. Derived from the name of a LBS that was a little slow getting work done. "Man, that roadclimb to the trailhead was almost a gevert long."

  • BABY BELLS
  • BABY BELLS

    Baby Bells is American slang for the regional telephone companies created by the break−up ofAmerican Telephone and Telegraph.

  • RF/PF
  • RF/PF

    Regional Forces and Popular Forces of South Vietnam; also known as "Ruff-Puffs." Pg. 519

  • tosheroon/tusheroon/tosh/tush/tusseroon
  • tosheroon/tusheroon/tosh/tush/tusseroon

    half-a-crown (2/6) from the mid-1900s, and rarely also slang for a crown (5/-), most likely based in some way on madza caroon ('lingua franca' from mezzo crown), perhaps because of the rhyming, or some lost cockney rhyming rationale.

  • MARTA
  • MARTA

    Metro Atlanta Regional Transit Authority. Or as it's sometimes known: Moving Africans Rapidly Through Atlanta.

  • Waver
  • Waver

    (1)Noun. Someone who was into the whole New Wave/Goth scene. See also Batcaver. I haven't met too many people outside of BC in Canada who recognize this one, so maybe it's a regional thing. Just like before coming here, I'd never heard the term Batcaver. :)

  • grot
  • grot

    Pornography. Used as e.g. "Neil's got some grot in his locker. He's showing it at first break". This use developed from 'grotty', itself a contraction of the word 'grotesque'. Though an old term, 'grot' was given a new lease on life and popularised by the late great Leonard Rossiter in his Reginald Perrin persona who in one comedic series was shown to make a fortune from a chain of shops called 'Grot' that sold goods with terminally built in obscelescence, i.e. they sold rubbish.

  • dinner
  • dinner

    n Northern English mid-day meal. This is a bit of a generalisation — the words dinner, “tea,” “lunch” and “supper” seem to be assigned to meals spattered randomly around the day in both American and English regional dialects.

Wiki AI search on online names & meanings containing REGIONALE QUALITTSLEITUNG-MWD

REGIONALE QUALITTSLEITUNG-MWD

Online Slangs & meanings of the slang REGIONALE QUALITTSLEITUNG-MWD

REGIONALE QUALITTSLEITUNG-MWD

  • REGINALD DENNY
  • REGINALD DENNY

    Reginald Denny was mid−th century London Cockney rhyming slang for a penny.

  • fock, focking
  • fock, focking

    Regional variation of fuck, fucking. Same meaning, i.e. the act of sexual intercourse. Pronunciation differences in area of Plymouth.

  • Footie
  • Footie

    regional term for either Australian Rules Football, or Rugby League or Union!

  • bock, bok
  • bock, bok

    To break, dismantle, disassemble, trash. Regional dialect word used in schools around Plymouth.

  • Five by Five
  • Five by Five

    Currently used as an affirmative response - i.e. a complete interjective sentence ("Five by Five!") or as an adjective ("I'm five by five with that"). Meaning: everything's okay, under control, copacetic, hunky-dory, etc. Was in use in the movie Aliens (1986) nd was a hallmark of the character "Faith" from Buffy: the Vampire Slayer, which marks its passage into general understanding. However it was in use far earlier that either of those with a specific purpose and rationale for its existence. The phrase dates back to World War II, originating from radio voice communications. When operators used to talk to each other they first used the phrase “loud and clear” to describe their reception among each other. With a desire to be more precise, they adopted a numerical scale from one to five. Shortly thereafter, these radio operators incorporated the phrase 'five by five' ('five out of five for volume and clarity' i.e. 'loud and clear.'). So '5 by 5 means 'I hear you loud and clear.' Certainly was in common use in exactly this way in the US Army during the Vietnam war. Certainly was in common use in exactly this way in the US Army during the Vietnam war. (ed: we are interested in knowing if the phrase is any older than 1986?) We ask and we receive - seems Stephen heard it in use in (of all places) the 'Thunderbirds' puppet show in the 1960's.

  • Patois
  • Patois

    Regional dialect; a regional form of a language, used informally and usually containing elements regarded as nonstandard.

  • kevin, kev
  • kevin, kev

    A male of a low socio-economic class with reluctant facial hair who drives a Ford Escort, has an underage girlfriend, and wears lots of sports gear. More specific than a NED, they would take their cars to local parks to pracice handbreak turns etc. The contributor has researched this word quite extensively and offers some regional variations: JAMMER (East Birmingham) CHARVER (Newcastle and Carlisle) DUSTBIN (Tamworth) In North Birmingham the female equivalent was called a SHARON/SHAZ/SHAZZA.

  • nought
  • nought

    n pron. “nawt” the digit zero. It’s an Old English word meaning “nothing” still used in northern regional English. Also occasionally used in the U.S., along with its more common American sibling, “aught.”

  • jagoff, jerkoff, jackoff
  • jagoff, jerkoff, jackoff

    Regional term used heavily in the Chicago area. Refers to one who is useless, clueless, or generally an idiot. e.g. "The guy in the '89 Mustang with the mullet is SUCH a jagoff". Possibly a USA translation of the Euro-Yiddish term "schmuck", but more likely derived similarly to terms such as "wanker" etc.

  • gevert
  • gevert

    n. (regional) a really long period of time. Derived from the name of a LBS that was a little slow getting work done. "Man, that roadclimb to the trailhead was almost a gevert long."

  • BABY BELLS
  • BABY BELLS

    Baby Bells is American slang for the regional telephone companies created by the break−up ofAmerican Telephone and Telegraph.

  • RF/PF
  • RF/PF

    Regional Forces and Popular Forces of South Vietnam; also known as "Ruff-Puffs." Pg. 519

  • tosheroon/tusheroon/tosh/tush/tusseroon
  • tosheroon/tusheroon/tosh/tush/tusseroon

    half-a-crown (2/6) from the mid-1900s, and rarely also slang for a crown (5/-), most likely based in some way on madza caroon ('lingua franca' from mezzo crown), perhaps because of the rhyming, or some lost cockney rhyming rationale.

  • MARTA
  • MARTA

    Metro Atlanta Regional Transit Authority. Or as it's sometimes known: Moving Africans Rapidly Through Atlanta.

  • Waver
  • Waver

    (1)Noun. Someone who was into the whole New Wave/Goth scene. See also Batcaver. I haven't met too many people outside of BC in Canada who recognize this one, so maybe it's a regional thing. Just like before coming here, I'd never heard the term Batcaver. :)

  • grot
  • grot

    Pornography. Used as e.g. "Neil's got some grot in his locker. He's showing it at first break". This use developed from 'grotty', itself a contraction of the word 'grotesque'. Though an old term, 'grot' was given a new lease on life and popularised by the late great Leonard Rossiter in his Reginald Perrin persona who in one comedic series was shown to make a fortune from a chain of shops called 'Grot' that sold goods with terminally built in obscelescence, i.e. they sold rubbish.

  • dinner
  • dinner

    n Northern English mid-day meal. This is a bit of a generalisation — the words dinner, “tea,” “lunch” and “supper” seem to be assigned to meals spattered randomly around the day in both American and English regional dialects.