What is the meaning of DARBY BANDS. Phrases containing DARBY BANDS
See meanings and uses of DARBY BANDS!Slangs & AI meanings
Hands. Get yer jazz bands off me
Noun. Stomach. Rhyming slang on belly. Also Darby Kelly, and often abbreviated to Derby Kel. [Early 1900s]
Belly. That's the stuff for you Derby Kell; makes you fit and it makes you well .From old cockney song Boiled Beef and Carrots - pronounced Darby.
Darky Cox is theatre rhyming slang for a box.
Likely comes from the black singer Terence Trent D'Arby, who claimed that his debut album was the most important album since "Sgt. Pepper" and then bored his audience with self-important lyrics, losing major credibility in the process.
Warby is Australian slang for someone or something filthy, inferior, defective.
Darby and Joan is London Cockney rhyming slang for moan. Darby and Joan is London Cockney rhyming slang for alone. Darby and Joan is London Cockney rhyming slang for a phone.
Cool, trendy, groovy. Rather good.
Derby is Black−American slang for oral sex.
(1) A wanker in the insulting form of the word, as in "Ha you're a dobber" (2) a glass marble of around 25mm in diameter, and so around twice the size of the more usual sized variety. (3) a condom (term popularly used in Leicester and Surrounds. (4) In the Derby area of the UK during the 50's and 60's this was the popular name for a catapult - does this suggest that the folks in Leicester were hard put to find elastic for their weapons? (5) A person of questionable common sense. Example "whit'd ye dae that fur, ya fuckin' dobber!".
Entered more or less verbatim: me and my friends have started to use the 'spam-purse'. It is another word for a womens vagina. there is a game we play where we in turn yell it out in turn each time getting louder. we are between the ages of 14 and 16 and we bought your book after a shopping expedition in Derby and in waterstones when an old women asked if we knew of a book that was an alternative dictionary, we found yours and gave it to her. after she bought it we read through a few pages and were laughing are heads off especially at sack whack which we hadnt heard befor but it became a common occurance to use it. we are very sorry to that old women who we dont think really wanted that book.
Something remarkable or superior
Darby bands is London Cockney rhyming slang for hands.
Belly
German bands is London Cockney rhyming slang for hands.
Describes a prostitute paid for sex with drugs (usu. marijuana or cocaine). Children use it as an insult to someone, "Shut up Darcy, your such a dope hoe".
Imperial Cty Arboretum District
Box
Derby brights is London Cockney rhyming slang for lights.
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n.
A bass wind instrument, of a loud and coarse tone, formerly much used in military bands, and sometimes introduced into the orchestra; -- so called from its form.
n.
A race for three-old horses, run annually at Epsom (near London), for the Derby stakes. It was instituted by the 12th Earl of Derby, in 1780.
n.
Either one of two species of South African wild horses remarkable for having the body white or yellowish white, and conspicuously marked with dark brown or brackish bands.
n.
A stiff felt hat with a dome-shaped crown.
a.
Smeary; viscous; glutinous; adhesive.
n.
The fibrous material which makes up the greater part of the stems and branches of trees and shrubby plants, and is found to a less extent in herbaceous stems. It consists of elongated tubular or needle-shaped cells of various kinds, usually interwoven with the shinning bands called silver grain.
n.
An armadillo (Xenurus unicinctus), native of the tropical parts of South America. It has about thirteen movable bands composed of small, nearly square, scales. The head is long; the tail is round and tapered, and nearly destitute of scales; the claws of the fore feet are very large. Called also tatouary, and broad-banded armadillo.
n.
A plasterer's float, having two handles; -- used in smoothing ceilings, etc.
a.
Having zones, or concentric bands; striped.
n.
An annelid larva having telotrochal bands of cilia.
n.
A negro.
n.
A marine sparoid food fish (Stenotomus chrysops, or S. argyrops), common on the Atlantic coast of the United States. It appears bright silvery when swimming in the daytime, but shows broad blackish transverse bands at night and when dead. Called also porgee, paugy, porgy, scuppaug.
n.
A name given to a numerous family of brass wind instruments with valves, invented by Antoine Joseph Adolphe Sax (known as Adolphe Sax), of Belgium and Paris, and much used in military bands and in orchestras.
n.
The chaffinch; -- so called from the white bands on the wing.
n.
The panel for the name, between the bands of the back of a book.
a.
Having the tail crossed by conspicuous bands of color.
a.
Having, or surrounded by, three fasciae, or bands.
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Having the anterior surface of the tarsus covered with scutella, or transverse scales, in the form of incomplete bands terminating at a groove on each side; -- said of certain birds.
n.
One of the Plymouth Brethren, or of a sect among them; -- so called from John N. Darby, one of the leaders of the Brethren.
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