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Online Slangs & meanings of slangs

Slangs & AI meanings

  • GROUP−GROPE
  • GROUP−GROPE

    Group−grope is slang for a group sex session.

  • pantomime
  • pantomime

    n light-hearted play, usually performed at Christmas and aimed at children. Pantomimes traditionally feature a man playing one of the lead female parts (the “pantomime dame”). There is a certain repertory of standard pantomimes (Jack and the Beanstalk, Cinderella, Aladdin to name a few) and often reparatory groups will make up their own ones, either off the top of their thespian heads or based on other plays. The lead parts are usually played by second-rate soap-opera actors or half-dead theatrical-types. The whole genre is pretty crap, and essentially only exists so that children with special needs can feel normal.

  • Is the Pope Catholic?
  • Is the Pope Catholic?

    Used as a resounding "Yes, you idiot." Made famous in Canada by improv comedian Colin Mochrie. "Are you getting smart with me?" "Is the Pope Catholic?"

  • Lurk
  • Lurk

      (1) A place of resorting to or concealment in.  (2) A scheme or method

  • GO STRAIGHT
  • GO STRAIGHT

    Go straight is slang for renouncing a life of crime.

  • stinger
  • stinger

    An exclamation used to acknowledge the pain or anguish of a second party, though often that pain may well have been brought about by the first party themselves. For example, when changing after PE, when some amount of bare skin was inevitable, a person might issue a resounding and painful slap to the bare back of a contemporary, leaving a large red hand mark and bringing about a squeal of pain. "Stinger!" the slapper might then say, as if to sympathise with their agony. It was also used to acknowledge pain that was merely witnessed, not caused. Say, for example, if you saw someone go over their handle bars at 30mph or take a cricket ball full pelt to the bridge of the nose, "Stinger!" you'd announce, with a heavy emphasis on the first syllable. "Stinger" was also used in constructions such as: "Stinger for you!" and the stranger "Stinger for YOUR head!!!".

  • willie
  • willie

    n penis. The film Free Willie attracted large optimistic female audiences when it was released in the U.K. That could either mean audiences of large optimistic females, or large audiences of optimistic females. Either way itÂ’s a lie. Of perhaps more amusement to Brits was the 1985 American film Goonies, which featured a group of children who found a secret pirate-ship commanded by a fearsome pirate named One-Eyed-Willie. Or how about the Alaskan car-wash company, Wet Willies, who offer two levels of service named Little Willie and Big Willie? Seems something of a no-brainer.

  • fag
  • fag

    1 n cigarette. In very widespread use. One of the most amusing emails I’ve had concerning this word was from an American who had arrived at her company’s U.K. offices to be told that the person she was looking for was “outside blowing a fag.” 2 n first year senior-school kids who have to perform menial tasks (cleaning boots, running errands and the like) for the seniors (slightly antiquated). Another email tells me of a man who was met with aghast looks when he told a group of New Yorkers that he “was a fag at school last year.” Modern thinking on slavery has seen that the practice of fagging all but die out.

  • 2/6 heave
  • 2/6 heave

    The original entry related to the term 4/6 heave which related to moving a fixed object belonging to (I believe) the Royal Navy (could be the RAF), one had to obtain a work order which was numbered 46. So when a group of squaddies (that's another one)were moving something, to make sure they all lifted at the same time someone called out. "4/6, Heave".However, it turns out the term is actually 2, 6 heave!"It's a naval expression, originally used when gun crews pulled the cannon in or out of the gun port. The 2 and the 6 related to the numbers of the men that were to pull- gunner 2 and gunner 6. Never heard it at school but my Dad, being a sailor, used it all the time. Normally shortened to just "2! 6!If anyone can add to this - or to the 4/6 heave story, please do.

  • scrub
  • scrub

    n. A person who is poor and has little to no money. The group T.L.C. popularized the word back in the 90’s with their song “No Scrub.” In the song they actually define the term.  "Man, I ain't hangin' out with them scrubs; we’ll have to pay for their lunch and bus fare!" 

  • Squad
  • Squad

    Your tribe, crew or group of friends that you hang out with.  "I was hanging with my squad when we saw this preacher cat commin' at us talking about "God loves us and stuff"." 

  • jumped
  • jumped

    v. to be beat down and attacked by a group of individuals.  "If that fool keep talken smack, he’s gonna get jumped by those dudes around the way." 

  • GROUPIE
  • GROUPIE

    Groupie is slang for an ardent fan of a celebrity, especially a pop star.

  • bloke
  • bloke

    n guy. A bloke is a Joe Public, a random punter — any old fellow off the street. Unlike “guy,” however, it can’t apply to your friends. You can’t walk up to a group of your mates and say “Hi blokes, what’s up?” as they’d all peer at you as if you’d been reading some ill-informed, cheap dictionary. Without question, the most common usage of the word is in the phrase “some bloke in the pub.”

  • Gat
  • Gat

    n. A gun (derived from Gatling gun). This term came of age during the late 80’s when rap groups such as NWA used the term for guns. *Although this term is not widely used anymore, it still bears stating as it has had use and could be still in circulation in certain contexts.  "Paul, you didn’t tell me you was strapped! Why you gotta have a Gat?" 

  • RAP GROUP
  • RAP GROUP

    Rap group is American slang for a group that meets to dicuss problems, etc.

  • grenades
  • grenades

    A term used to describe a group of unattractive large women. (See also landmines: a term used to describe thin unattractive females...these two terms are often used together.)  "Yo, that party got nothing but grenades up in there!" 

Wiki AI search on online names & meanings containing RESOURCING GROUP

RESOURCING GROUP

  • Employee resource group
  • Employee resource groups (also known as ERGs, affinity groups, business network groups, or business resource groups) are groups of employees who join in

  • Vegetarian Resource Group
  • The Vegetarian Resource Group (VRG) is an American 501(c)(3) non-profit organization dedicated to educating the public on veganism and its relation to

  • Healthcare Resource Group
  • a Healthcare Resource Group (HRG) is a grouping consisting of patient events that have been judged to consume a similar level of resource. For example

  • Vertex Resource Group
  • Vertex Resource Group Ltd. (Vertex) is a publicly traded environmental services company based in Sherwood Park and is traded on the TSX Venture Exchange

  • TRG Pakistan
  • The Resource Group Pakistan, commonly known as TRG Pakistan, is a Pakistani venture capital firm specializing in investments in business process outsourcing

  • Shared risk resource group
  • Shared risk resource group (commonly referred to as shared risk group or SRG) is a concept in optical mesh network routing that different networks may

  • Iona Community
  • practices of the Wild Goose Resource Group have been widely imitated and written about. Collections of Wild Goose Resource Group songs and texts have been

  • Aker ASA
  • cement group in Norway with focus on the offshore industry. The cement business was sold in 1999. Kjell Inge Røkke used his investment company Resource Group

  • Sinomine Resources
  • Sinomine Resource Group Co., Ltd. (Chinese: 中矿资源集团股份有限公司) is a Chinese mining and resource development company headquartered in Beijing. The company operates

  • URL
  • Uniform Resource Locators were defined in RFC 1738 in 1994 by Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web, and the URI working group of the Internet

Online Slangs & meanings of the slang RESOURCING GROUP

RESOURCING GROUP

  • GROUP−GROPE
  • GROUP−GROPE

    Group−grope is slang for a group sex session.

  • pantomime
  • pantomime

    n light-hearted play, usually performed at Christmas and aimed at children. Pantomimes traditionally feature a man playing one of the lead female parts (the “pantomime dame”). There is a certain repertory of standard pantomimes (Jack and the Beanstalk, Cinderella, Aladdin to name a few) and often reparatory groups will make up their own ones, either off the top of their thespian heads or based on other plays. The lead parts are usually played by second-rate soap-opera actors or half-dead theatrical-types. The whole genre is pretty crap, and essentially only exists so that children with special needs can feel normal.

  • Is the Pope Catholic?
  • Is the Pope Catholic?

    Used as a resounding "Yes, you idiot." Made famous in Canada by improv comedian Colin Mochrie. "Are you getting smart with me?" "Is the Pope Catholic?"

  • Lurk
  • Lurk

      (1) A place of resorting to or concealment in.  (2) A scheme or method

  • GO STRAIGHT
  • GO STRAIGHT

    Go straight is slang for renouncing a life of crime.

  • stinger
  • stinger

    An exclamation used to acknowledge the pain or anguish of a second party, though often that pain may well have been brought about by the first party themselves. For example, when changing after PE, when some amount of bare skin was inevitable, a person might issue a resounding and painful slap to the bare back of a contemporary, leaving a large red hand mark and bringing about a squeal of pain. "Stinger!" the slapper might then say, as if to sympathise with their agony. It was also used to acknowledge pain that was merely witnessed, not caused. Say, for example, if you saw someone go over their handle bars at 30mph or take a cricket ball full pelt to the bridge of the nose, "Stinger!" you'd announce, with a heavy emphasis on the first syllable. "Stinger" was also used in constructions such as: "Stinger for you!" and the stranger "Stinger for YOUR head!!!".

  • willie
  • willie

    n penis. The film Free Willie attracted large optimistic female audiences when it was released in the U.K. That could either mean audiences of large optimistic females, or large audiences of optimistic females. Either way itÂ’s a lie. Of perhaps more amusement to Brits was the 1985 American film Goonies, which featured a group of children who found a secret pirate-ship commanded by a fearsome pirate named One-Eyed-Willie. Or how about the Alaskan car-wash company, Wet Willies, who offer two levels of service named Little Willie and Big Willie? Seems something of a no-brainer.

  • fag
  • fag

    1 n cigarette. In very widespread use. One of the most amusing emails I’ve had concerning this word was from an American who had arrived at her company’s U.K. offices to be told that the person she was looking for was “outside blowing a fag.” 2 n first year senior-school kids who have to perform menial tasks (cleaning boots, running errands and the like) for the seniors (slightly antiquated). Another email tells me of a man who was met with aghast looks when he told a group of New Yorkers that he “was a fag at school last year.” Modern thinking on slavery has seen that the practice of fagging all but die out.

  • 2/6 heave
  • 2/6 heave

    The original entry related to the term 4/6 heave which related to moving a fixed object belonging to (I believe) the Royal Navy (could be the RAF), one had to obtain a work order which was numbered 46. So when a group of squaddies (that's another one)were moving something, to make sure they all lifted at the same time someone called out. "4/6, Heave".However, it turns out the term is actually 2, 6 heave!"It's a naval expression, originally used when gun crews pulled the cannon in or out of the gun port. The 2 and the 6 related to the numbers of the men that were to pull- gunner 2 and gunner 6. Never heard it at school but my Dad, being a sailor, used it all the time. Normally shortened to just "2! 6!If anyone can add to this - or to the 4/6 heave story, please do.

  • scrub
  • scrub

    n. A person who is poor and has little to no money. The group T.L.C. popularized the word back in the 90’s with their song “No Scrub.” In the song they actually define the term.  "Man, I ain't hangin' out with them scrubs; we’ll have to pay for their lunch and bus fare!" 

  • Squad
  • Squad

    Your tribe, crew or group of friends that you hang out with.  "I was hanging with my squad when we saw this preacher cat commin' at us talking about "God loves us and stuff"." 

  • jumped
  • jumped

    v. to be beat down and attacked by a group of individuals.  "If that fool keep talken smack, he’s gonna get jumped by those dudes around the way." 

  • GROUPIE
  • GROUPIE

    Groupie is slang for an ardent fan of a celebrity, especially a pop star.

  • bloke
  • bloke

    n guy. A bloke is a Joe Public, a random punter — any old fellow off the street. Unlike “guy,” however, it can’t apply to your friends. You can’t walk up to a group of your mates and say “Hi blokes, what’s up?” as they’d all peer at you as if you’d been reading some ill-informed, cheap dictionary. Without question, the most common usage of the word is in the phrase “some bloke in the pub.”

  • Gat
  • Gat

    n. A gun (derived from Gatling gun). This term came of age during the late 80’s when rap groups such as NWA used the term for guns. *Although this term is not widely used anymore, it still bears stating as it has had use and could be still in circulation in certain contexts.  "Paul, you didn’t tell me you was strapped! Why you gotta have a Gat?" 

  • RAP GROUP
  • RAP GROUP

    Rap group is American slang for a group that meets to dicuss problems, etc.

  • grenades
  • grenades

    A term used to describe a group of unattractive large women. (See also landmines: a term used to describe thin unattractive females...these two terms are often used together.)  "Yo, that party got nothing but grenades up in there!"Â