What is the meaning of clamshells. Phrases containing clamshells
See meanings and uses of clamshells!Slangs & AI meanings
clamshells
Slangs & AI derived meanings
n women’s underpants. In old-fashioned English and American English, “knickers” (an abbreviation of the Dutch-derived word “knickerbockers”) are knee-length trousers most often seen nowadays on golfers.
Noun. A small bet. E.g."I'm having a flutter on the horses this afternoon."
crack
n the standard U.K. measure of beer - equivalent to 0.568 litres in new money or twenty ounces in American money. It is normally possible to buy a half-pint instead of a pint, but doing so will mar you for life in the eyes of your peers. Drinking half-pints of beer is generally seen as the liquid equivalent of painting your fingernails and mincing. At some point in history (no idea when) a British king (not sure which one) elected to raise tax on beer but upon discovering that he needed an act of parliament to change the tax, he instead changed the size of the pint (which only required a royal edict). The smaller sixteen-ounce American pint, therefore actually represents the original size of the British pint. As you can see IÂ’ve not researched this at all. I just wrote down what someone told me. There are many times in my life when IÂ’m forced to make a simple choice between the real truth and a funny story.
Spending is British slang for money.
Noun. The vagina.
n lowly servant; gopher. Your dogsbody would be the person who polished your shoes, emptied your bins and cleaned your loo. That is, if you were lucky enough to have someone like that. The term may originate from a dried pea-based foodstuff used in the Royal Navy, which sailors called “dog’s body”. Perhaps the first person to be called a dogsbody closely resembled a dried pea.
Phrs. 1. Fluctuating, moving up and down. 2. Emotionally unstable
Bisexual.
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