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Online Slangs & meanings of slangs

Slangs & AI meanings

  • Rig Run
  • Rig Run

    To go ashore in uniform, when in other than home port.

  • kit
  • kit

    n sports uniform (e.g. rugby kit, football kit). More generally in the U.K., kit refers to the equipment necessary to perform a particular task - usually, though not always, sporting. The boundary is woolly to such a degree that it’s difficult to generalise - I’ve heard all sorts of things from parachutes to computers referred to as “kit.” nice piece of kit an item particularly good at performing its task in hand. Again it could refer to pretty much anything, though I think you’d be more likely to describe your new camera as a nice piece of kit than, say, your fiancé.

  • CAMMIES
  • CAMMIES

    camouflage uniforms. Some Coastguardsmen wore any of the various types and styles used in Vietnam.

  • Square rig
  • Square rig

    Term used for the RCN sailor's uniform worn prior to the 1970s.

  • Rig of the Day
  • Rig of the Day

    The uniform to be worn for the day or for a specific activity as laid down in routine orders or by announcement to the ship's company.

  • OBE
  • OBE

    Order of the British Empire. A decoration that one might see on the uniform of a WWII veteran.

  • Seven Seas Creases
  • Seven Seas Creases

    On the traditional square rig uniform, the bell-bottomed trousers were pressed so that seven creases were present, apparently one for each of the seven seas.

  • No Names, No Pack-Drill
  • No Names, No Pack-Drill

    Means to say nothing, and avoid repercussions. This term comes from the Army, specifically the British Army. However it is often used by members of the RCN to this day. Pack-drill was a punishment given to soldiers requiring them to undertake drill in full uniform and carrying a heavy pack. "No names, no pack-drill" was used to imply that the names of those who have committed a transgression will not be mentioned in order to spare them from the awful punishment.

  • Number 1's
  • Number 1's

    Dress uniform.

  • Mufti
  • Mufti

    An old army term for your "civvies". Civilian clothes that is, rather than your uniform.

  • Temporary Loan
  • Temporary Loan

    A category of loan that is used for kit that is not issued to a sailor for the remainder of his career. For example, a uniform is issued, but a life belt is a temporary loan.

  • Pirate Rig
  • Pirate Rig

    Civilian clothing, often outlandish and colourful, that sailors will wear instead of their uniforms, but only on the rare occasions that this is allowed. One such occasion is often a ship's banyan.

  • FATIGUES
  • FATIGUES

    standard combat uniform, green in color. Pg. 509

  • Tango Uniform
  • Tango Uniform

    Polite phonetics for “tits up”; broken, not functioning.

  • BO DOI
  • BO DOI

    a uniformed NVA soldier. Pg. 505

  • copper
  • copper

    n policeman. May come from the copper buttons policemen originally wore on their uniforms; may also be derived from the Latin “capere,” which means “to capture.” In turn, the American word “cop” may be derived from copper, although may equally easily be an abbreviation for “Constable on Patrol” or “Constable of the Police.” There. I don’t think I committed to anything.

  • WHITE MICE
  • WHITE MICE

    South Vietnamese police. The nickname came from their uniform white helmets and gloves. Pg. 523

  • Uni-Bags
  • Uni-Bags

    The green uniforms the navy wore from unification in the late 1960s until the Distinctive Environmental Uniforms were issued in the late 1980s.

  • Tiddley Suit
  • Tiddley Suit

    When the RCN wore square rig, this was a sailor's best uniform, which was often tailor-made and saved for extra-special occasions. Often, it couldn't be worn on parade as it was sometimes illegally altered, however it could be worn ashore when the sailor wished to impress the ladies.

  • DRESS WHITES
  • DRESS WHITES

    the formal light weight uniform for the Navy and Coast Guard.

Wiki AI search on online names & meanings containing UFAWU UNIFOR

UFAWU UNIFOR

  • Canadian Auto Workers
  • Communications, Energy and Paperworkers Union of Canada, forming a new union, Unifor. While rooted in Ontario's large auto plants of Windsor, Brampton, Oakville

  • International Union of Food, Agricultural, Hotel, Restaurant, Catering, Tobacco and Allied Workers' Associations
  • Canada National Union of Public and General Employees NUPGE Canada UNIFOR UNIFOR Canada UNITE HERE! Canada Canada United Food and Commercial Workers

Online Slangs & meanings of the slang UFAWU UNIFOR

UFAWU UNIFOR

  • Rig Run
  • Rig Run

    To go ashore in uniform, when in other than home port.

  • kit
  • kit

    n sports uniform (e.g. rugby kit, football kit). More generally in the U.K., kit refers to the equipment necessary to perform a particular task - usually, though not always, sporting. The boundary is woolly to such a degree that it’s difficult to generalise - I’ve heard all sorts of things from parachutes to computers referred to as “kit.” nice piece of kit an item particularly good at performing its task in hand. Again it could refer to pretty much anything, though I think you’d be more likely to describe your new camera as a nice piece of kit than, say, your fiancé.

  • CAMMIES
  • CAMMIES

    camouflage uniforms. Some Coastguardsmen wore any of the various types and styles used in Vietnam.

  • Square rig
  • Square rig

    Term used for the RCN sailor's uniform worn prior to the 1970s.

  • Rig of the Day
  • Rig of the Day

    The uniform to be worn for the day or for a specific activity as laid down in routine orders or by announcement to the ship's company.

  • OBE
  • OBE

    Order of the British Empire. A decoration that one might see on the uniform of a WWII veteran.

  • Seven Seas Creases
  • Seven Seas Creases

    On the traditional square rig uniform, the bell-bottomed trousers were pressed so that seven creases were present, apparently one for each of the seven seas.

  • No Names, No Pack-Drill
  • No Names, No Pack-Drill

    Means to say nothing, and avoid repercussions. This term comes from the Army, specifically the British Army. However it is often used by members of the RCN to this day. Pack-drill was a punishment given to soldiers requiring them to undertake drill in full uniform and carrying a heavy pack. "No names, no pack-drill" was used to imply that the names of those who have committed a transgression will not be mentioned in order to spare them from the awful punishment.

  • Number 1's
  • Number 1's

    Dress uniform.

  • Mufti
  • Mufti

    An old army term for your "civvies". Civilian clothes that is, rather than your uniform.

  • Temporary Loan
  • Temporary Loan

    A category of loan that is used for kit that is not issued to a sailor for the remainder of his career. For example, a uniform is issued, but a life belt is a temporary loan.

  • Pirate Rig
  • Pirate Rig

    Civilian clothing, often outlandish and colourful, that sailors will wear instead of their uniforms, but only on the rare occasions that this is allowed. One such occasion is often a ship's banyan.

  • FATIGUES
  • FATIGUES

    standard combat uniform, green in color. Pg. 509

  • Tango Uniform
  • Tango Uniform

    Polite phonetics for “tits up”; broken, not functioning.

  • BO DOI
  • BO DOI

    a uniformed NVA soldier. Pg. 505

  • copper
  • copper

    n policeman. May come from the copper buttons policemen originally wore on their uniforms; may also be derived from the Latin “capere,” which means “to capture.” In turn, the American word “cop” may be derived from copper, although may equally easily be an abbreviation for “Constable on Patrol” or “Constable of the Police.” There. I don’t think I committed to anything.

  • WHITE MICE
  • WHITE MICE

    South Vietnamese police. The nickname came from their uniform white helmets and gloves. Pg. 523

  • Uni-Bags
  • Uni-Bags

    The green uniforms the navy wore from unification in the late 1960s until the Distinctive Environmental Uniforms were issued in the late 1980s.

  • Tiddley Suit
  • Tiddley Suit

    When the RCN wore square rig, this was a sailor's best uniform, which was often tailor-made and saved for extra-special occasions. Often, it couldn't be worn on parade as it was sometimes illegally altered, however it could be worn ashore when the sailor wished to impress the ladies.

  • DRESS WHITES
  • DRESS WHITES

    the formal light weight uniform for the Navy and Coast Guard.