What is the meaning of BAS. Phrases containing BAS
See meanings and uses of BAS!Slangs & AI meanings
Baste the tuna is slang for to masturbate (said of a woman).
Basin Of Gravy is London Cockney rhyming slang for a baby.
Bassing is slang for getting loud.
person who bases
Basil Fawlty is London Cockney rhyming slang for balti.
Bashy is Jamaican slang for attractive, nice, pleasant.
Basher is British slang for a thug, a bully.Basher is British slang for a shelter or shack built from rubbish and lived in by a vagrant.
a semipermanent field headquarters and center for a given unit usually within that unit's tactical areas responsibility. A unit may operate in or away from its base camp. Base camps usually contain all or part of a given unit's support elements. Pg. 504
Basket is British slang for a bastard.Basket is British slang for a male homosexual.Basket is Black−American slang for the penis and groin.
Bash Street Kid is London Cockney rhyming slang for a Jew (Yid).
Basehead is American slang for a drug user who smokes crack cocaine.
Baste is Black American slang for to attack or ridicule someone behind their back.
Bash up is British slang for to thrash; beat violently.
Basket case is British slang for some one crazy or insane.Basket case is American and Canadian slang for a person who has had both arms and both legsamputated, or someone who is completely incapacitated or a person who is suffering from extremenervous strain; a nervous wreck.
Bashment is Jamaican slang for a dance, stage show.
Baster is American and Australian slang for a house thief.
Basin is British slang for something that needs no container, such as advice.
Basic brown is American political slang for a person who has little or no interest in, or commitment to, environmental issues.
Basin Cut is British slang for a short back and sides haircut achieved by plaing a basin over the head and cutting around it.
Basil − shortened from Basil Fawlty − is London Cockney rhyming slang for fourty pounds.
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p. pr. & vb. n.
of Baste
v. t.
To bastinado.
n.
See Bastinado, n.
pl.
of Bastinado
n.
A work projecting outward from the main inclosure of a fortification, consisting of two faces and two flanks, and so constructed that it is able to defend by a flanking fire the adjacent curtain, or wall which extends from one bastion to another. Two adjacent bastions are connected by the curtain, which joins the flank of one with the adjacent flank of the other. The distance between the flanks of a bastion is called the gorge. A lunette is a detached bastion. See Ravelin.
n.
The lowest member of a base when divided horizontally, or of a baseboard, pedestal, or the like.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Bastinado
n.
"The Bastille", formerly a castle or fortress in Paris, used as a prison, especially for political offenders; hence, a rhetorical name for a prison.
n.
Same as Prison base.
imp. & p. p.
of Bastinado
n.
A basket in which clothes are carried to the wash.
n.
The deepest pedal stop, or the lowest tones of an organ; the fundamental or ground bass.
a.
Furnished with a bastion; having bastions.
a.
Pertaining to, or having the nature of, a basyle; electro-positive; basic; -- opposed to chlorous.
imp. & p. p.
of Baste
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