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Online Slangs & meanings of slangs

Slangs & AI meanings

  • toe-rag
  • toe-rag

    Literally a piece of cloth used to clean between the toes and therefore quite probably scruffy and smelly. Often used by teachers, and boys at secondary school in Lincolnshire especially the head master Mr. Sykes, who would often say "You're a toe-rag lad, no I'll change that, You're an intelligent toe-rag.".

  • secondary virgin
  • secondary virgin

    Not taking part in sexual acts or not masturbating denial of all sexual pleasure untell marriage, as past of one's Christian believe. [Before I came to the Lord I had sex with all the men I could, but today I am a secondary virgin.].

  • scruds
  • scruds

    Mew pupils at school. used particularly of new first formers(year 7) in secondary school - "The scruds".

  • clanking (... for it)
  • clanking (... for it)

    A "quaint" saying from a secondary school, i.e. "The bitch was clanking for it' meaning a young lady was sexually aroused and wanted sex. Usually a complete lie and said in the company of your male mates when asked to talk about your date with 'X' the previous night.

  • breasts
  • breasts

    Secondary sexual characteristics.

  • SECOND BANANA
  • SECOND BANANA

    Second banana is slang for a performer in vaudeville, etc., who plays a role subordinate to another;any person in a or secondary position to another.

  • abstinence
  • abstinence

    1. not taking part in sexual acts. 2. not masturbating or denial of all sexual pleasure. Synonyms: born again virgin; secondary virginity.

  • registration
  • registration

    n licence plate. While Americans can have anything they fancy on theirs, and they bear little pictures of sunny beaches and legends like “Ohio - The Flour Biscuit State” and such, the Brits have slightly more plain affairs and less choice about what goes on them. Well, no choice at all, in point of fact. As the government changed their systems of number/letter combinations a good few times, however, there is a lively secondary market in plates that look like they say something.

  • muffy
  • muffy

    To break wind, fart, e.g. 'Who let Muffy off the chain?' exclaimed after an anonymous fart to discover the perpetrator. Sometimes abbreviated to 'Who muffed?'. This expression was used frequently in Primary School. However, by Secondary school, it seemed to have dropped from the vocabulary. Most likely that was due to a fading interest in random bodily functions, and increased interest in the opposite sex!

  • grammar puff
  • grammar puff

    Ubiquitous insult used by kids from the various secondary modern schools against us Grammar School kids (one of the last in the country) if you were spotted in your uniform. The reply was usually "Thicko!" - esp. if you were in a gang or feeling brave/suicidal/a good runner and on your own.

  • Aye Aye
  • Aye Aye

    1. Reply to an order or command to indicate that it, firstly, is heard; and, secondly, is understood and will be carried out. 2. Technically the correct reply from a boat to a challenging ship on being hailed when there is an officer onboard. If the captain of a ship is in the boat the reply is the ship's name.

  • wad bombs
  • wad bombs

    At the contributors Lincolnshire secondary school, they called Wasp Shits, Wad Bombs (pronounced Wod-Bombs). Wadbombs were almost always fired with a 6 inch ruler (never 12 inch), or sometimes with the barrel of a biro. Often coloured, wadbombs would be used on white ceilings for maximum effect, and often paper was substituted for a chewed Bubbaloo sweet. One particular wad bomb remained on the physics room ceiling for at least seven years. Often, games revolved around attempting to fire wad bombs at a model human body (maximum points gained if the head was struck), trying to create the loudest sound by flicking a massive, sopping wet wadbomb on the ceiling during a quiet part of the lesson, all-out wadbomb wars involving firing wadbombs at point-blank range at someones face, and most dangerous off all, attempting to fire small wadbombs right in front of the teacher's face as they wrote on the blackboard, with their backs us. Only one boy succeeded, and was praised for the rest of his school career, for superb aim, technique, and above all, balls.

  • Isolation
  • Isolation

    A technique that focuses work on an individual muscle without secondary or assisting muscle groups being involved, which provides maximal muscle shape. A good example is the seated dumbbell concentration curl.

  • jib (2)
  • jib (2)

    (1) Describe something that someone does not want to say e.g. a coarse word such as sex or fingering someone. (2) As a word to replace any other word really. An example sentence: did you see that man jibbing along., There are many different forms of the word jibs, including, jibbed, jibbing, jib and jibbified and all of these words are in extensive use in many secondary schools in SE England. Jamie and Adam thought of this word and are proud of how it has been used.

  • Adds 
  • Adds 

    (n.) Secondary monsters that spawn in boss fights

  • Build
  • Build

    The heart, soul and life force of every character. A character without a build is like a human without a heart. A build combines your primary attributes (Health, Magicka, Stamina), your secondary attributes (Armor, Weapon Damage etc.) your class, your gear, your combination of abilities, your race and your buffs into your character's overall proficiency.

  • 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!)

Wiki AI search on online names & meanings containing SECONDARY TEACHER

SECONDARY TEACHER

  • Teacher
  • elementary school teachers, 674,000 middle school teachers, and 1 million secondary school teachers employed in the U.S. In the past, teachers have been paid

  • Institute of Ismaili Studies
  • Graduate Programme in Islamic Studies and Humanities (GPISH) and the Secondary Teacher Education Programme (STEP). Established in 1977 by the Aga Khan, it

  • Association of Secondary Teachers, Ireland
  • The Association of Secondary Teachers, Ireland (ASTI) is a trade union for secondary school teachers in Ireland. It is a member of the Irish Congress

  • Leo Moran
  • and Sociology at University College Galway. He later trained as a secondary teacher and earned a higher diploma in education. At Galway, he met several

  • Teacher Eligibility Test
  • Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) maintains the TET database and guides government bodies on conducting the test. The Central Teacher Eligibility

  • International Federation of Secondary Teachers
  • The International Federation of Secondary Teachers (French: Fédération internationale des professeurs de l'enseignement secondaire officiel, FIPESO) was

  • Education in the Philippines
  • educational system. Elementary teacher LET from 2014 to 2019 revealed an average passing rate of only 28 percent, while secondary teacher LET showed an average

  • Victorian Secondary Teachers Association
  • The Victorian Secondary Teachers Association (VSTA) was a Victorian trade union organisation which existed from 1953 to 1995. It was originally established

  • Education in Malawi
  • schools, government day secondary schools, and private secondary schools. Most secondary teachers are qualified and hold either degrees or diplomas. In

  • Diploma of Education
  • become a primary or secondary teacher, or a teacher in an early childhood center or adult education environment such as TAFE (a TAFE Teacher holding only a

Online Slangs & meanings of the slang SECONDARY TEACHER

SECONDARY TEACHER

  • toe-rag
  • toe-rag

    Literally a piece of cloth used to clean between the toes and therefore quite probably scruffy and smelly. Often used by teachers, and boys at secondary school in Lincolnshire especially the head master Mr. Sykes, who would often say "You're a toe-rag lad, no I'll change that, You're an intelligent toe-rag.".

  • secondary virgin
  • secondary virgin

    Not taking part in sexual acts or not masturbating denial of all sexual pleasure untell marriage, as past of one's Christian believe. [Before I came to the Lord I had sex with all the men I could, but today I am a secondary virgin.].

  • scruds
  • scruds

    Mew pupils at school. used particularly of new first formers(year 7) in secondary school - "The scruds".

  • clanking (... for it)
  • clanking (... for it)

    A "quaint" saying from a secondary school, i.e. "The bitch was clanking for it' meaning a young lady was sexually aroused and wanted sex. Usually a complete lie and said in the company of your male mates when asked to talk about your date with 'X' the previous night.

  • breasts
  • breasts

    Secondary sexual characteristics.

  • SECOND BANANA
  • SECOND BANANA

    Second banana is slang for a performer in vaudeville, etc., who plays a role subordinate to another;any person in a or secondary position to another.

  • abstinence
  • abstinence

    1. not taking part in sexual acts. 2. not masturbating or denial of all sexual pleasure. Synonyms: born again virgin; secondary virginity.

  • registration
  • registration

    n licence plate. While Americans can have anything they fancy on theirs, and they bear little pictures of sunny beaches and legends like “Ohio - The Flour Biscuit State” and such, the Brits have slightly more plain affairs and less choice about what goes on them. Well, no choice at all, in point of fact. As the government changed their systems of number/letter combinations a good few times, however, there is a lively secondary market in plates that look like they say something.

  • muffy
  • muffy

    To break wind, fart, e.g. 'Who let Muffy off the chain?' exclaimed after an anonymous fart to discover the perpetrator. Sometimes abbreviated to 'Who muffed?'. This expression was used frequently in Primary School. However, by Secondary school, it seemed to have dropped from the vocabulary. Most likely that was due to a fading interest in random bodily functions, and increased interest in the opposite sex!

  • grammar puff
  • grammar puff

    Ubiquitous insult used by kids from the various secondary modern schools against us Grammar School kids (one of the last in the country) if you were spotted in your uniform. The reply was usually "Thicko!" - esp. if you were in a gang or feeling brave/suicidal/a good runner and on your own.

  • Aye Aye
  • Aye Aye

    1. Reply to an order or command to indicate that it, firstly, is heard; and, secondly, is understood and will be carried out. 2. Technically the correct reply from a boat to a challenging ship on being hailed when there is an officer onboard. If the captain of a ship is in the boat the reply is the ship's name.

  • wad bombs
  • wad bombs

    At the contributors Lincolnshire secondary school, they called Wasp Shits, Wad Bombs (pronounced Wod-Bombs). Wadbombs were almost always fired with a 6 inch ruler (never 12 inch), or sometimes with the barrel of a biro. Often coloured, wadbombs would be used on white ceilings for maximum effect, and often paper was substituted for a chewed Bubbaloo sweet. One particular wad bomb remained on the physics room ceiling for at least seven years. Often, games revolved around attempting to fire wad bombs at a model human body (maximum points gained if the head was struck), trying to create the loudest sound by flicking a massive, sopping wet wadbomb on the ceiling during a quiet part of the lesson, all-out wadbomb wars involving firing wadbombs at point-blank range at someones face, and most dangerous off all, attempting to fire small wadbombs right in front of the teacher's face as they wrote on the blackboard, with their backs us. Only one boy succeeded, and was praised for the rest of his school career, for superb aim, technique, and above all, balls.

  • Isolation
  • Isolation

    A technique that focuses work on an individual muscle without secondary or assisting muscle groups being involved, which provides maximal muscle shape. A good example is the seated dumbbell concentration curl.

  • jib (2)
  • jib (2)

    (1) Describe something that someone does not want to say e.g. a coarse word such as sex or fingering someone. (2) As a word to replace any other word really. An example sentence: did you see that man jibbing along., There are many different forms of the word jibs, including, jibbed, jibbing, jib and jibbified and all of these words are in extensive use in many secondary schools in SE England. Jamie and Adam thought of this word and are proud of how it has been used.

  • Adds 
  • Adds 

    (n.) Secondary monsters that spawn in boss fights

  • Build
  • Build

    The heart, soul and life force of every character. A character without a build is like a human without a heart. A build combines your primary attributes (Health, Magicka, Stamina), your secondary attributes (Armor, Weapon Damage etc.) your class, your gear, your combination of abilities, your race and your buffs into your character's overall proficiency.

  • 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!)