What is the meaning of DOLL. Phrases containing DOLL
See meanings and uses of DOLL!Slangs & AI meanings
Doll, Woman
Doll city is American slang for a beautiful person.Doll city is American slang for a pleasant situation or idea.
, dolly Woman
Dollies is American slang for the synthetic heroin substitute dolophine (methadone).
Dolly bag is British slang for a secret pocket used by dockers to smuggle goods.
Dolly Varden is London Cockney rhyming slang for garden.Dolly Varden is London Cockney rhyming slang for Covent Garden.
Doll is slang for a pretty girl or woman of little intelligence: it is sometimes also used as a term of address. Doll is British slang for an amphetamine pill.Doll was old slang for a prostitute.
Doll up is slang for to adorn or dress oneself or another, especially a child, in a stylish or showy manner.
Dolly Dimple is British slang for a fat person.
Dolls is American slang for amphetamine pills.
Dollar is British slang for pence.Dollar is obsolete slang for a five−shilling piece (a crown).
Dollface is American slang for an attractive or cute person.
Dolly mixtures is London Cockney rhyming slang for the cinema (the pictures).
Dolly shop is British slang for an unlicensed pawnbrokers.
Dollop is British slang for a piece of excrement.
Dolly bird is slang for an attractive and fashionable girl, especially one who is considered to be unintelligent.
Dolly cotton is London Cockney rhyming slang for rotten.
Dolly (shortened from dolly bird) is slang for an attractive and fashionable girl, especially one who is considered to be unintelligent. Dolly is Polari slang for pleasant.
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n.
The Spanish real, of the value of one eight of a dollar, or 12/ cets; -- formerly so called in New York and some other States. See Note under 2.
v. t.
To promise to give, by writing one's name with the amount; as, each man subscribed ten dollars.
n.
A denomination of money, in China, worth nearly six shillings sterling, or about a dollar and forty cents; also, a weight of one ounce and a third.
n.
Any one of numerous species of small freshwater American cyprinoid fishes, belonging to Notropis, or Minnilus, and allied genera; as the redfin (Notropis megalops), and the golden shiner (Notemigonus chrysoleucus) of the Eastern United States; also loosely applied to various other silvery fishes, as the dollar fish, or horsefish, menhaden, moonfish, sailor's choice, and the sparada.
n.
The dollar fish, or butterfish.
v. t.
To pledge; to hazard on the event of a contest; to stake; to bet, to lay; to wager; as, to wage a dollar.
n.
Any structure having a flowerlike form; especially, the group of five broad ambulacra on the upper side of the spatangoid and clypeastroid sea urchins. See Illust. of Spicule, and Sand dollar, under Sand.
v. t.
To stamp or impress with a stroke; to coin; as, to strike coin from metal: to strike dollars at the mint.
v. t.
Strength or means furnished toward promoting an object, or deliverance from difficulty or distress; aid; ^; also, the person or thing furnishing the aid; as, he gave me a help of fifty dollars.
n.
Any one of numerous species of perch-like North American fresh-water fishes of the family Centrachidae. They have a broad, compressed body, and strong dorsal spines. Among the common species of the Eastern United States are Lepomis gibbosus (called also bream, pondfish, pumpkin seed, and sunny), the blue sunfish, or dollardee (L. pallidus), and the long-eared sunfish (L. auritus). Several of the species are called also pondfish.
n.
A money of account in Persia, whose value varies greatly at different times and places. Its average value may be reckoned at about two and a half dollars.
a.
A fee offered to professional men for their services; as, an honorarium of one thousand dollars.
n.
The value of a dollar; the unit commonly employed in the United States in reckoning money values.
n.
Formerly, a jocose term for a bank note greatly depreciated in value; also, for paper money of a denomination less than a dollar.
v. t.
To borrow money of; to make a demand upon; as, he struck a friend for five dollars.
n.
A child's mane for a doll.
pl.
of Dolly
n.
A name given to several different silver coins of Denmark, Holland, Sweden,, NOrway, etc., varying in value from about 30 cents to $1.10; also, a British coin worth about 36 cents, used in Ceylon and at the Cape of Good Hope. See Rigsdaler, Riksdaler, and Rixdaler.
a.
Ten times ten; five score; as, a hundred dollars.
v. t.
To mention or suggest as an estimate, hypothesis, or approximation; hence, to suppose; -- in the imperative, followed sometimes by the subjunctive; as, he had, say fifty thousand dollars; the fox had run, say ten miles.
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