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  • K. D.
  • K. D.

    Kraft Dinner a popular boxed macaroni and cheese dinner that is often served with pieces of cut up weiners in it and topped with ketchup. A staple food for most Canadian children. Occasionally found on children's menus in restaurants and has been featured on pub fare menus, served right in a pot with a wooden spoon. Although traditionally thought of as a comfort food, it is thought of as trailer trash fare in some circles.

  • your mum
  • your mum

    General insult using the persons mother as the weapon of attack - generally regard as humour in most circles: For example "Your trainers are shit" "Yeah? Well so is your mum!" "The reasons your mum's so fat is because I give her a biscuit every time I fuck her!!" There are many, many, many more - if someone would like to send them in I'll load in the best.

  • cooties
  • cooties

    Initially introduced as a bug - probably head lice, cooties are some form of horrid affliction that you can get by coming into contact with anyone of the opposite sex, or sometimes same sex, if they're gross. (i.e.: all gross people by definition have cooties.) So once established as an imaginary infestation on the playground, cooties have become to be associated almost exclusively with with girls (possibly because they traditionally have more hair for head lice to infest) although anyone of questionable hygene is subject to cootie ridicule. Either way, for boys the rule is "Stay away from girls, because girl have cooties". Infestation could be prevented by common measures like crossing your fingers (although in the US it wasn't called bargies) or simply by avoiding contact with infected persons(i.e. running away as fast as you can). Also you could receive a cootie immunization by the well known incantation and actions: "Circle, Circle, dot, dot, Now I have my cootie shot" (whilst drawing 2 circles on your forearm, and then poking it twice in the middle for the dot, dot part), I'm sure there is a lot more cootie lore out there. (ed: would love to hear it if you have some?)

  • Shellback
  • Shellback

    An old-timer. One who has crossed one or more of the Equator, the Arctic or Antarctic Circles.

  • CIRCLES
  • CIRCLES

    rohypnol

  • aureola
  • aureola

    Anatomical name for the darker skin that circles around the nipple.

  • Ace Boon Coon
  • Ace Boon Coon

    A euphemistic way of saying my ni**a or my best friend. Note: because of the use of the word 'coon' this is a very explosive word just like the 'N' word. African Americans may use it among themselves, but it is rude (and grounds for a beat down in some circles)for someone of another ethnicity to use it. In other words, it's an 'off-limits' word.  "Johnny and me been down since we was shorties. You know he my Ace Boon Coon." 

  • e-class
  • e-class

    n. e-class is a very nice type of Mercedes Benz.  2. n. even though an e-class is a Benz, in some circles, they'll refer to a really expensive car (i.e. Mercedes, Bently, Rolls Royce, BMW) as an e-class.  "Homie ridin' e-class." 

  • roses
  • roses

    n. Dollars. Used mostly as a euphemism in prostitution circles. Sometimes also referred to as "flowers."  "She said that she’d do whatever you wanted to for a donation of 100 roses." 

  • circles
  • circles

    Rohypnol

  • Pot-hunter
  • Pot-hunter

     A man who gives his time up to rowing or punting, or any sort of match in order to win the “pewters” which are given as prizes. The term is now much used in aquatic and athletic circles, and is applied, in a derogatory sense, to men of good quality who enter themselves in small races they are almost sure to win, and thus deprive the juniors of small trophies which should be above the attention of champions, though valuable to beginners. Also an unwelcome guest, who manages to be just in time for dinner.

  • Basket of eggs
  • Basket of eggs

    An astronomical fix taken when the sun is almost exactly overhead. The result when plotted looks like a collection of small circles.

  • dingle
  • dingle

    Noun. A person from Burnley (Lancashire). Generally derog, and heard mainly in football circles, especially by rival Blackburn fans.

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  • Sphere
  • n.

    The apparent surface of the heavens, which is assumed to be spherical and everywhere equally distant, in which the heavenly bodies appear to have their places, and on which the various astronomical circles, as of right ascension and declination, the equator, ecliptic, etc., are conceived to be drawn; an ideal geometrical sphere, with the astronomical and geographical circles in their proper positions on it.

  • Ring
  • n.

    The plane figure included between the circumferences of two concentric circles.

  • Lapwing
  • n.

    A small European bird of the Plover family (Vanellus cristatus, or V. vanellus). It has long and broad wings, and is noted for its rapid, irregular fight, upwards, downwards, and in circles. Its back is coppery or greenish bronze. Its eggs are the "plover's eggs" of the London market, esteemed a delicacy. It is called also peewit, dastard plover, and wype. The gray lapwing is the Squatarola cinerea.

  • Scalloped
  • a.

    Having the edge or border cut or marked with segments of circles. See Scallop, n., 2.

  • High
  • superl.

    Exalted in social standing or general estimation, or in rank, reputation, office, and the like; dignified; as, she was welcomed in the highest circles.

  • Unsymmetrical
  • a.

    Not symmetrical; being without symmetry, as the parts of a flower when similar parts are of different size and shape, or when the parts of successive circles differ in number. See Symmetry.

  • Symmetrical
  • a.

    Having an equal number of parts in the successive circles of floral organs; -- said of flowers.

  • Vestlet
  • n.

    Any one of several species of actinians belonging to the genus Cerianthus. These animals have a long, smooth body tapering to the base, and two separate circles of tentacles around the mouth. They form a tough, flexible, feltlike tube with a smooth internal lining, in which they dwell, whence the name.

  • Purl
  • v. & n.

    To rise in circles, ripples, or undulations; to curl; to mantle.

  • Salon
  • n.

    An apartment for the reception of company; hence, in the plural, fashionable parties; circles of fashionable society.

  • Hoop
  • n.

    A circle, or combination of circles, of thin whalebone, metal, or other elastic material, used for expanding the skirts of ladies' dresses; crinoline; -- used chiefly in the plural.

  • Symmetry
  • n.

    Equality in the number of parts of the successive circles in a flower.

  • Spherics
  • n.

    The doctrine of the sphere; the science of the properties and relations of the circles, figures, and other magnitudes of a sphere, produced by planes intersecting it; spherical geometry and trigonometry.

  • Tropic
  • n.

    One of the two small circles of the celestial sphere, situated on each side of the equator, at a distance of 23¡ 28/, and parallel to it, which the sun just reaches at its greatest declination north or south, and from which it turns again toward the equator, the northern circle being called the Tropic of Cancer, and the southern the Tropic of Capricorn, from the names of the two signs at which they touch the ecliptic.

  • Straddling
  • a.

    Applied to spokes when they are arranged alternately in two circles in the hub. See Straddle, v. i., and Straddle, v. t., 3.

  • Scallop
  • v. t.

    To mark or cut the edge or border of into segments of circles, like the edge or surface of a scallop shell. See Scallop, n., 2.

  • Lune
  • n.

    A figure in the form of a crescent, bounded by two intersecting arcs of circles.

  • House
  • n.

    A twelfth part of the heavens, as divided by six circles intersecting at the north and south points of the horizon, used by astrologers in noting the positions of the heavenly bodies, and casting horoscopes or nativities. The houses were regarded as fixed in respect to the horizon, and numbered from the one at the eastern horizon, called the ascendant, first house, or house of life, downward, or in the direction of the earth's revolution, the stars and planets passing through them in the reverse order every twenty-four hours.

  • Scallop
  • n.

    One of series of segments of circles joined at their extremities, forming a border like the edge or surface of a scallop shell.

  • Spherograph
  • n.

    An instrument for facilitating the practical use of spherics in navigation and astronomy, being constructed of two cardboards containing various circles, and turning upon each other in such a manner that any possible spherical triangle may be readily found, and the measures of the parts read off by inspection.

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