What is the meaning of BONGO MAG. Phrases containing BONGO MAG
See meanings and uses of BONGO MAG!Slangs & AI meanings
Minimum fuel for a comfortable and safe return to base. Aircraft can fly and fight past bingo fuel in combat situations, but at considerable peril.
Bingo is British customs officers' slang for an arrest or a successful search. Bingo was th centuryBritish slang for alcoholic spirits, particularly brandy.
Italian wordplay of African names/language
Dark African Americans who act better than White people
Noun. Fatty, folds of flesh on the underarms of overweight women, who might commonly be seen at Bingo nights. [1990s]
to inject a drug
Pongo is slang for a black person, a foreigner. Pongo is British slang for a smelly person.Pongo is British slang for a person with a large nose.Pongo is Australian and New Zealand slang for an English person.Pongo is military slang for a soldier or marine.
Bong is slang for a type of water−pipe with a carburetion hole used for smoking cannabis. Bong is slang for to smoke cannabis with a water−pipe.
Serviceman in the land element.
Air Force term for the point in a flight in which there's only enough fuel remaining to return to base.
(Aviation) NATO codeword meaning low fuel level and requiring either an immediate return to base or vector to a tanker.
Noun. A pornographic magazine. Abbreviated form of the less commonly heard bongo magazine.
bong
a marijuana smoking utensil. Lyrical reference: AFROMAN LYRICS - Crazy Rap "Stop and hit the bong like Cheech and Chong..."Â
n thatÂ’s that done. Popularised by T.V. chef Jamie Oliver, and now used by people who are young enough to think it sounds nice.
To inject a drug
A phrase used when something bad happens. Example of a guy talking to a friend. "Hey man, I wrecked my car this afternoon". "Harsh Bong dude..."
A mentler From DEN BONG, the mentler out of Darts, and Tiswas.
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n.
A genus of amphibians, inhabiting the Southern United States, having a serpentlike form, but with four minute limbs and two persistent gill openings; the Congo snake.
n.
A magpie.
v. t.
To exaggerate; as, to magnify a loss or a difficulty.
v. t.
To make great, or greater; to increase the dimensions of; to amplify; to enlarge, either in fact or in appearance; as, the microscope magnifies the object by a thousand diameters.
n.
The quality of being magniloquent; pompous discourse; grandiloquence.
a.
Magniloquent.
a.
Pertaining to a natural order (Magnoliaceae) of trees of which the magnolia, the tulip tree, and the star anise are examples.
n.
A kind of canoe used in Central and South America; also, a kind of boat used in the Southern United States.
v. i.
To have the power of causing objects to appear larger than they really are; to increase the apparent dimensions of objects; as, some lenses magnify but little.
n.
The language of the Magyars.
n.
A South American stork (Euxenara maguari), having a forked tail.
n.
A European fish (Zoarces viviparus), remarkable for producing living young; -- called also greenbone, guffer, bard, and Maroona eel. Also, an American species (Z. anguillaris), -- called also mutton fish, and, erroneously, congo eel, ling, and lamper eel. Both are edible, but of little value.
n.
Black tea, of higher grade (finer leaf and less dusty) than the present bohea. See Tea.
n.
Any large ape; especially, the chimpanzee and the orang-outang.
n.
Greatness, in reference to influence or effect; importance; as, an affair of magnitude.
n.
Alt. of Congo
n.
The mangrove; -- so called in the Pacific Islands.
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