What is the meaning of BACCA PIPES. Phrases containing BACCA PIPES
See meanings and uses of BACCA PIPES!Slangs & AI meanings
Tobacco. The sort you use to roll your own.
 Whiskers curled in small, close ringlets.
Ounce of baccy is London Cockney rhyming slang for a Pakistani (Paki).
Weak, boring
Tobacco
Acca is Australian slang for academic
Enormous, huge. From massive, mega.
Half ounce of baccy is London Cockney rhyming slang for a Pakistani child (Paki).
Term for any small native watercraft, especially in the Western Pacific or Indian Ocean/Persian Gulf. "Banca" is from the Tagalog language, meaning "boat".
Bacca box is slang for the mouth.
Crap. I'm off for a macca . Comes from Macaroni => pony; Pony & Trap => Crap
Baccy is British slang for tobacco.
- Tobacco. The sort you use to roll your own.
Lovely, beautiful, pretty
A word to say after someone has uttered something totally retarded or stupid.
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n.
To render impervious or solid by driving with a calking iron; as, to stave lead, or the joints of pipes into which lead has been run.
n.
In the organ, one of the knobs or handles at each side of the organist, by which he can draw on or shut off any register or row of pipes; the register itself; as, the vox humana stop.
a.
Connected with, or serving to connect, three channels or pipes; as, a three-way cock or valve.
n.
A wind instrument containing numerous pipes of various dimensions and kinds, which are filled with wind from a bellows, and played upon by means of keys similar to those of a piano, and sometimes by foot keys or pedals; -- formerly used in the plural, each pipe being considired an organ.
n.
A short piece of pipe used for covering a joint, or forming a joint between the ends of two other pipes.
v. t.
To fit for producing the proper sounds; to regulate the tone of; as, to voice the pipes of an organ.
n.
The mock orange; -- popularly so called because its stems were formerly used as pipestems.
n.
A West Indian name for two large timber trees (Podocarpus coriaceus, and P. Purdicanus) of the Yew family. The wood, which is much used, is pale brownish with darker streaks.
n.
A joint or other connection uniting parts of machinery, or the like, as the elastic pipe of a tender connecting it with the feed pipe of a locomotive engine; especially, a pipe fitting for connecting pipes, or pipes and fittings, in such a way as to facilitate disconnection.
n.
A certain measure for liquids, as for wine, equal to two pipes, four hogsheads, or 252 gallons. In different countries, the tun differs in quantity.
n.
A kind of clay slate, carved by the Indians into tobacco pipes. Cf. Catlinite.
n.
A wind instrument made of reeds tied together; -- called also pandean pipes.
n.
An hydraulic apparatus, or a system of works or fixtures, by which a supply of water is furnished for useful or ornamental purposes, including dams, sluices, pumps, aqueducts, distributing pipes, fountains, etc.; -- used chiefly in the plural.
a.
Having three pipes.
n.
The round hole in the furnace of a glass manufactory through which the fused glass is taken out.
n.
The flour of a hard and small-grained wheat made into dough, and forced through small cylinders or pipes till it takes a slender, wormlike form, whence the Italian name. When the paste is made in larger tubes, it is called macaroni.
n.
A resinous substance produced mainly on the banyan tree, but to some extent on other trees, by the Coccus lacca, a scale-shaped insect, the female of which fixes herself on the bark, and exudes from the margin of her body this resinous substance.
n.
A stop on the organ, containing several ranks of pipes which reenforce some of the high harmonics of the ground tone, and make the sound more brilliant.
n.
A fine white claylike mineral, soft, and light enough when in dry masses to float in water. It is a hydrous silicate of magnesia, and is obtained chiefly in Asia Minor. It is manufacturd into tobacco pipes, cigar holders, etc. Also called sepiolite.
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