What is the meaning of WOVE. Phrases containing WOVE
See meanings and uses of WOVE!Slangs & AI meanings
Burst (urinate). I'm dying for a Geoff. Geoff Hurst's World Cup Final hat-trick v West Germany at Wembley in 1966 and six goals v Sunderland (19.10.68) two years later, have been woven into the fabric of football folklore.
bottom shoe tacks; small brads used by shoemakers, especially those set in the soles so as to project a little for gripping when walking on ice or wover logs
Not really 'slang' but interesting nevertheless - quoted verbatim: "Not exactly a word, this was the French textbook loads of people learnt French from. There were a number of things we found amusing such as the guy who always asked "Est-ce-qu'il-y-a un Banc pres d'ici?" in a voice so deep it made Mr Bean sound like Joe Pasquali. The reason for this we realised must be due to the fact that the Tricolore audio cassetes were recorded by two blokes, and since any women's voices were just a bloke talking in a high-pitched voice, they had to make the blokes obvious, and consequently they all had deep voices. This was not helped by the fact that our French tapes were all played on the standard "School-Issue" Coomber cassete player with a big black woven-grille front and a wooden back with holes drilled in it. These cassete players invariably resonated erratically no matter what kind of sound was being played. Some common Tricolore Phrases: • "Comment????" • "Oui, Madamme, il-y-a une Banc la-bas." • "Numero UN!!!, Sex-ion A!!!! EX-OM-PLUH!!!" Of course, all our books dated back to the seventies so when I was at school in the mid nineties you couldn't see the photos due to the "modifications" that other students had made over the years. I remember the Woman-With-The-Petrol-Pump photo was the most graffitied.
Woven cotton fabric or material. Clothing in Australia manufactured from "Flannelette"
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Slangs & AI derived meanings
Adj./Exclam. 1. Excellent, great. [Orig. U.S.] 2. OK. [Orig. U.S.]
a yobbo, an unsophisticated person.
Adj. Slow witted or slow in movement, laid back. [South Wales/W. Midlands use]
Term takin from subway train terminology. Used to describe a party or situation or activity that won't end for a long time. made popular in early Hip Hop rhymes. (exam. "we rock the mic nonstop")
when a person makes a phone call, usually late at night and when intoxicated, and embarasses oneself, or shares information that they will later regret.Â
Amped up is slang for very excited.
Saltee is old Polari slang for a penny.
Marijuana
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n.
A woven band of cotton or flax, used for reins, girths, bed bottoms, etc.
n.
A kind of woven fabric for waistcoats, having the weft of wool and the warp of silk or cotton.
n.
A shining material used for ornamental purposes; especially, a very thin, gauzelike cloth with much gold or silver woven into it; also, very thin metal overlaid with a thin coating of gold or silver, brass foil, or the like.
a.
Pertaining to weaving or to woven fabrics; as, textile arts; woven, capable of being woven; formed by weaving; as, textile fabrics.
n.
A strong, closely woven linen or cotton fabric, of which ticks for beds are made. It is usually twilled, and woven in stripes of different colors, as white and blue; -- called also ticken.
n.
That which woven; a woven fabric; a web.
n.
Cloth for towels, especially such as is woven in long pieces to be cut at will, as distinguished from that woven in towel lengths with borders, etc.
n.
A textile fabric composed of two or more materials, as cotton, silk, wool, etc., woven together.
n.
The threads that cross the warp in a woven fabric; the weft; the filling; the thread usually carried by the shuttle in weaving.
n.
That which is, or may be, woven; a fabric made by weaving.
n.
A web; a thing woven.
a.
Woven double, as cloth or carpeting, by incorporating two sets of warp thread and two of weft.
n.
A woven fabric.
v. t.
To unfold; to undo; to ravel, as what has been woven.
n.
A fillet or narrow woven fabric, commonly of silk, used for trimming some part of a woman's attire, for badges, and other decorative purposes.
n.
A mixed woven fabric of silk and cotton, or silk and wool; sayette; also, a light woolen fabric.
a.
Of or pertaining to a group of carnivores, including the wovels and the dogs.
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