What is the meaning of DITCH. Phrases containing DITCH
See meanings and uses of DITCH!Slangs & AI meanings
Arrested.
marijuana
The field was not just the grass playing field, but anything green (apart from the walled shrubbery at our school which was out of bounds anyway). Every year around April you'd wait for the whisper to go around - "field!" - which meant the caretaker had decided we could go on the grass again. In a wet spring you might wait until late May, and Field was banned again by late October most years. Ditch, however, was out of bounds all year around, and thus the cool place to hide at all times. Going Ditch in winter was the ultimate in "hardness", although you always got found out because of the mud.
Ditch is slang for cannabis.
Inferior quality marijuana
Be absent from school without permission.
That part of the right-of-way that is lower than the roadbed. A derailed train is "in the ditch"
Hedge and ditch is London Cockney rhyming slang for a stallholder's location (pitch).
Wrecked or derailed
Marijuana
To throw away.
Asshole; the rectal opening; anus.
Saying coined in response to the bashing campaign of early 90's in response to "Silly Faggot Dicks are for Chicks.".
Anal intercourse.
Ditch weed is slang for marijuana of inferior quality, marijuana growing naturally in the wild.
inferior quality marijuana
Ditchweed is slang for cannabis.
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imp. & p. p.
of Ditch
v. t.
To cut down perpendicularly, or nearly so; as, to scarp the face of a ditch or a rock.
v. t.
To surround with a ditch.
pl.
of Ditch
n.
A ditch on the outside of the counterscarp, usually full of water.
v. t.
To dig a ditch or ditches in; to drain by a ditch or ditches; as, to ditch moist land.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Ditch
v. i.
To dig a ditch or ditches.
v. t.
One who trenches; esp., one who cuts or digs ditches.
n.
A raised line or strip, as of ground thrown up by a plow or left between furrows or ditches, or as on the surface of metal, cloth, or bone, etc.
n.
One who digs ditches.
n.
The slope of the ditch nearest the parapet; the escarp.
v. t.
To dig an underground ditches in, so as to drain the surface; to underdrain; as, to underditch a field or a farm.
n.
An outwork in the main ditch, in front of the curtain, between two bastions. See Illust. of Ravelin.
v. t.
To cut furrows or ditches in; as, to trench land for the purpose of draining it.
v. t.
A long, narrow cut in the earth; a ditch; as, a trench for draining land.
v. t.
To throw into a ditch; as, the engine was ditched and turned on its side.
v. t.
To fortify by cutting a ditch, and raising a rampart or breastwork with the earth thrown out of the ditch; to intrench.
n.
A work constructed on each side of the ravelins, to increase their strength, procure additional ground beyond the ditch, or cover the shoulders of the bastions.
n.
A narrow ditch or trench made from the foremost parallel toward the glacis or covert way of a besieged place by digging under cover of gabions, etc.
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