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  • gool, gools, glue
  • gool, gools, glue

    gool, gools, glue

    These words were used interchangeably as the term meaning "home base" when playing tag. When the game of tag began, someone would specify what Gool or Glue would be, and that object would be the home base where one could be "safe" from being tagged. Similar to 'Base'. Alternative viewpoint: I grew up in New England in the late 70's and the term "gools" was completely ubiquitous as a singular noun. "Glue" was never used to mean "home base", but if "gool" was used, I never noticed. It's possible that "gools" evolved from "gool" through the expression "No gool(s) sticking!" (ie. don't hover around home base because it doesn't give other players a fair chance of reaching it.) Even as an adult, if talk of childhood games ever comes up with peers who grew up in different parts of New England, there's a nostalgic spark if "gools" (and notably not "gool") is mentioned as we all immediately recognize the word and at the same time note what a silly word it really is. (ed: which opened the door as usual for additional input and Arrigo sent the following in!) I am happy to see that the word gools appears in your dictionary. It was the first thing I thought of when I found out about your site, and, sure enough, there it was. It is erroneous to say it originated in the 1970s because the term was around the Phineas Bates elementary school in Roslindale Massachusetts (a neighborhood in Boston) in the 1940s when I was a kid. It was used mostly in the game of "hide and go se ek" similarly to the way in which the dictionary says it was used for "tag". The term "gools sticker" (pronounced "goolsticka") was also used. I have always wondered about its etymology. One of my theories is that it was a corrupt ion of the word "goal" that somehow took on an "s" at the end, perhaps as stated in the dictionary. Another possibility is a much older root from the archaic heraldic word "gules", which means "red" and is derived from the Latin gul a, meaning "throat". Anyhow, if a kid who was hiding touched the gools before the seeker saw him or her and got back to the gools first, then he/she would cry out "my gools 1-2- 3".

  • snot-rocket
  • snot-rocket

    snot-rocket

    Noun. An expulsion of mucus from the nose. Done by blocking one nostril with the fingers whilst blowing hard out of the other. See 'snot'.

  • ghosties
  • ghosties

    ghosties

    (1) a booger (dried up snot) floating in mid-nostril suspended by nose hair. Most commonly occurring when looking up at teachers. (2) in the game of playground handball, when people who were discluded from the game could run about the squares yelling GHOSTIES! and generally disrupt the game. (They were considered invisible because they were ghosts so anyone who hit the ghosties with the ball were out of the game).

  • bat in the cave
  • bat in the cave

    bat in the cave

    Noun. A globule or lump of nasal mucus when visible up a nostril.

  • NOSTRIL INTRUDER
  • NOSTRIL INTRUDER

    NOSTRIL INTRUDER

    Nostril intruder is British slang for an annoying person.

  • CRISSCROSSING
  • CRISSCROSSING

    CRISSCROSSING

    the practice of setting up a line of cocaine next to a line of heroin. The user places a straw in each nostril and snorts about half of each line. Then the straws are crossed and the remaining lines are snorted.

  • SNUFFER
  • SNUFFER

    SNUFFER

    Snuffer is slang for the nostrils.

  • Tits Machine
  • Tits Machine

    Tits Machine

    A good, righteous airplane. Current airplanes need not apply, this is a nostalgic term referring to birds gone by. By all accounts the F8 Crusader was a tits machine.

  • woofer
  • woofer

    woofer

    Flatulence (act or result) - e.g. "Who woofered?"; "Did you woofer?"; Contributor wrote the following: This was used by my circle of friends for a very brief period in the 9th grade in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada, a suburb about 30 km West of Toronto. We were a pretty straightlaced, upper middle class, but quite ethnically diverse bunch. My first contact, so to speak, with this word occurred when I met a bunch of other kids in the 9th grade (this is 1982, by the way) who had come from another public school. The use of the word more or less ran its course after six months or so, although, it has appeared sporadically on occasion since then, although more or less as a nostalgiac reference to that era.

  • JP-4, JP-5
  • JP-4, JP-5

    JP-4, JP-5

    Types of jet fuel: the aroma of which makes former aviators nostalgic for flight operations. Usually seen floating on top of a cup of “gojuice.”

  • fart knocker
  • fart knocker

    fart knocker

    A stupid person, jerk. Reported to us as one of Beavis and Butthead's many wonderful insults but now claimed to be in use as early as 1974 when claimant was in Kindergarten. He still uses it as a nostalgic reference to someone who was a complete moron. Fart knocker, a disreputable person. This was in common use in western USA in the mid 1950s.

  • crisscrossing
  • crisscrossing

    crisscrossing

    The practice of setting up a line of cocaine next to a line of heroin. The user places a straw in each nostril and snorts about half of each line. Then the straws are crossed and the remaining lines are snorted

  • tanner
  • tanner

    tanner

    sixpence (6d). The slang word 'tanner' meaning sixpence dates from the early 1800s and is derived most probably from Romany gypsy 'tawno' meaning small one, and Italian 'danaro' meaning small change. The 'tanner' slang was later reinforced (Ack L Bamford) via jocular reference to a biblical extract about St Peter lodging with Simon, a tanner (of hides). The biblical text (from Acts chapter 10 verse 6) is: "He (Peter) lodgeth with one Simon a tanner, whose house is by the sea side..", which was construed by jokers as banking transaction instead of a reference to overnight accommodation. Nick Ratnieks suggests the tanner was named after a Master of the Mint of that name. A further suggestion (ack S Kopec) refers to sixpence being connected with pricing in the leather trade. An obscure point of nostalgic trivia about the tanner is apparently (thanks J Veitch) a rhyme, from around the mid-1900s, sung to the tune of Rule Britannia: "Rule Brittania, two tanners make a bob, three make eighteen pence and four two bob…" My limited research suggests this rhyme was not from London.

  • have a bat in the cave
  • have a bat in the cave

    have a bat in the cave

    Vrb phrs. To have visible nasal mucus visible up a nostril. Used euphemistically.

  • BLAST FROM THE PAST
  • BLAST FROM THE PAST

    BLAST FROM THE PAST

    Blast from the past is British slang for an old record played on the radio. Blast from the past is British slang for something nostalgic.

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  • Barrett's Privateers
  • Barrett's Privateers

    "Barrett's Privateers" is a popular folk song in the style of a sea shanty, originally written and performed by Canadian musician Stan Rogers and considered as one of the Canadian Navy's unofficial anthems. The song tells the tale of a young fisherman who enlisted on Elcid Barrett's ill-fated ship, the Antelope.

  • Ratbag
  • Ratbag

    Moron, imbecile, one who shows disrespect or displays no feeling or compassion towards others

  • Pen down strike
  • Pen down strike

    a strike where workers just sit at their desks (with their pen down). (Indian English)

  • Halfway Party
  • Halfway Party

    A party celebrating the midpoint of a deployment.

  • Bend the crab
  • Bend the crab

    To overcharge a rude customer

  • endz
  • endz

    Noun. Area, place. E.g."What endz you from?" [London/Black use]

  • SWAK
  • SWAK

    A stylish or cool appearance.

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  • Tubinares
  • n. pl.

    A tribe of sea birds comprising the petrels, shearwaters, albatrosses, hagdons, and allied birds having tubular horny nostrils.

  • Thrill
  • v. t.

    A breathing place or hole; a nostril, as of a bird.

  • Vibrissa
  • n.

    One of the specialized or tactile hairs which grow about the nostrils, or on other parts of the face, in many animals, as the so-called whiskers of the cat, and the hairs of the nostrils of man.

  • Siphorhinal
  • a.

    Having tubular nostrils, as the petrels.

  • Tube-nosed
  • a.

    Having the nostrils prolonged in the form of horny tubes along the sides of the beak; -- said of certain sea birds.

  • Strepsorhine
  • a.

    Having twisted nostrils; -- said of the lemurs.

  • Vomer
  • n.

    A bone, or one of a pair of bones, beneath the ethmoid region of the skull, forming a part a part of the partition between the nostrils in man and other mammals.

  • Snort
  • v. t.

    To expel throught the nostrils with a snort; to utter with a snort.

  • Nostrum
  • n.

    Any scheme or device proposed by a quack.

  • Nostalgic
  • a.

    Of or pertaining to nostalgia; affected with nostalgia.

  • Heterocyst
  • n.

    A cell larger than the others, and of different appearance, occurring in certain algae related to nostoc.

  • Nostrums
  • pl.

    of Nostrum

  • Nostalgy
  • n.

    Same as Nostalgia.

  • Stagworm
  • n.

    The larve of any species of botfly which is parasitic upon the stag, as /strus, or Hypoderma, actaeon, which burrows beneath the skin, and Cephalomyia auribarbis, which lives in the nostrils.

  • Spiracle
  • n.

    The nostril, or one of the nostrils, of whales, porpoises, and allied animals.

  • Nostrum
  • n.

    A medicine, the ingredients of which are kept secret for the purpose of restricting the profits of sale to the inventor or proprietor; a quack medicine.

  • Scizorhinal
  • a.

    Having the anterior nostrils prolonged backward in the form of a slit.

  • Homesick
  • a.

    Pining for home; in a nostalgic condition.

  • Nostril
  • n.

    Perception; insight; acuteness.

  • Starshoot
  • n.

    See Nostoc.

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