What is the meaning of HAMILTON ACCIE. Phrases containing HAMILTON ACCIE
See meanings and uses of HAMILTON ACCIE!Slangs & AI meanings
Noun. See 'threepenny bits'. Thrupenny Bits - also the title of The Hampton Cobbler's original, cheeky and addictive punk rock football song.
Noun. Pakistani. Rhyming slang for 'paki'. Hamilton Accies, an abbreviation of Hamilton Academicals, a Scottish football team from Hamilton, S.E. of Glasgow. Offens. [Scottish use]
Prick. He gets on my wick. Don't even try to understand this one - just accept it
Hampton Court is London Cockney rhyming slang for salt.
nickname American prisoners of war used to describe the Hoa Loa Prison in Hanoi. Pg. 511
Hampton Wick is London Cockney rhyming slang for prick (penis).
Noun. The penis. Rhyming slang on 'prick'. See 'prick'.
Scrubber, tramp. tart, Possible derived out of 'Crescent', as in Halton Moor Crescent. For some reason, council estates in Leeds have more than their fair share of crescents, which usually aren't even crescent-shaped!
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n.
A place where ships may ride at anchor at some distance from the shore; a roadstead; -- often in the plural; as, Hampton Roads.
v. t.
To pilfer or purloin; hence, to steal from an author; to appropriate; to plagiarize; as, to crib a line from Milton.
v. i.
To use the faculty of describing; to give a description; as, Milton describes with uncommon force and beauty.
n.
A history of the acts and events of a life; a biography; as, Johnson wrote the life of Milton.
a.
Of, pertaining to, or resembling, Milton, or his writings; as, Miltonic prose.
n.
The act of breaking out or bursting forth; as: (a) A violent throwing out of flames, lava, etc., as from a volcano of a fissure in the earth's crust. (b) A sudden and overwhelming hostile movement of armed men from one country to another. Milton. (c) A violent commotion.
n.
Freight; cargo; lading. Milton.
n.
The doctrine that the existence of a personal Deity, an unseen world, etc., can be neither proved nor disproved, because of the necessary limits of the human mind (as sometimes charged upon Hamilton and Mansel), or because of the insufficiency of the evidence furnished by physical and physical data, to warrant a positive conclusion (as taught by the school of Herbert Spencer); -- opposed alike dogmatic skepticism and to dogmatic theism.
n.
A loss or decay of sight, from loss of power in the optic nerve, without any perceptible external change in the eye; -- called also gutta serena, the "drop serene" of Milton.
n.
A plant described by Milton as "of sovereign use against all enchantments."
n.
A metrical composition; a composition in verse written in certain measures, whether in blank verse or in rhyme, and characterized by imagination and poetic diction; -- contradistinguished from prose; as, the poems of Homer or of Milton.
a.
A term used by Sir William Hamilton to define propositions having their quantity indicated by a verbal sign; as, all, none, etc.; -- contrasted with preindesignate, defining propositions of which the quantity is not so indicated.
n.
An admirer of antiquity. [Used by Milton in a disparaging sense.]
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