What is the meaning of HERI. Phrases containing HERI
See meanings and uses of HERI!Slangs & AI meanings
Herion plus a depressant
To use herion; mexican rocks Popularized by the Guns N' Roses song, "Mr. Brownstone."
Herion/Tylenol
heroin
n dessert: If you keep spitting at your grandfather like that you’re going to bed without any pudding! Brits do also use the word in the same sense as Americans do (Christmas pudding, rice pudding, etc). The word “dessert” is used in the U.K. but really only in restaurants, never in the home. To complicate things further, the Brits have main meal dishes which are described as pudding - black pudding and white pudding. These are revolting subsistence foods from the dark ages made with offal, ground oatmeal, dried pork and rubbish from the kitchen floor. The difference between the black and white puddings is that the black one contains substantial quantities of blood. This, much like haggis, is one of those foodstuffs that modern life has saved us from but that people insist on dredging up because it’s a part of their “cultural heritage.” Bathing once a year and shitting in a bucket was a part of your cultural heritage too, you know. At least be consistent.
Mentally ambiguous. The word 'Chailey' was used to describe a person in exactly the same way as the word 'Joey' or 'Deacon'would have been. The word 'Chailey' was taken from the name of a Special Needs school called Chailey Heritage based about 10 miles from the school. http://www.chaileyheritage.e-sussex.sch.uk
Get back to one's roots is slang for to return to, or rediscover one's racial, ancestral or emotional heritage.
a period of in capacitation or lethergy as a result of the emmediate effect of a herion injection
Herion
HERI
HERI
HERI
HERI
HERI
HERI
HERI
n.
Formerly, a payment or tribute of arms or military accouterments, or the best beast, or chattel, due to the lord on the death of a tenant; in modern use, a customary tribute of goods or chattels to the lord of the fee, paid on the decease of a tenant.
a.
Capable of being inherited or of passing by inheritance; inheritable.
n.
That which is or may be inherited; that which is derived by an heir from an ancestor or other person; a heritage; a possession which passes by descent.
a.
A sort of ecclesiastical heriot, a customary gift claimed by, and due to, the minister of a parish on the death of a parishioner. It seems to have been originally a voluntary bequest or donation, intended to make amends for any failure in the payment of tithes of which the deceased had been guilty.
v. t.
To praise; to worship.
n.
Inheritance; heritage.
n.
Heritage; inheritance.
n.
A proprietor or landholder in a parish.
n.
A special breed of the dromedary used for rapid traveling; the swift camel; -- called also herire, and maharik.
n.
To settle or fix inalienably on a person or thing, or on a person and his descendants or a certain line of descendants; -- said especially of an estate; to bestow as an heritage.
a.
Capable of inheriting or receiving by inheritance.
v. t.
The right which an heir has of throwing the whole heritable and movable estates of the deceased into one mass, and sharing it equally with others who are of the same degree of kindred.
a.
Subject to the payment of a heriot.
n.
The state of being heritable.
n. pl.
The third part of the corn or grain growing on the ground at the tenant's death, due to the lord for a heriot, as within the manor of Turfat in Herefordshire.
n.
A beam or bar armed with iron spikes, and turning on a pivot; -- used to block up a passage.
a.
A possession; the Israelites, as God's chosen people; also, a flock under pastoral charge.
v. t.
To deprive of heritage; to dispossess.
a.
That which is inherited, or passes from heir to heir; inheritance.
HERI
HERI
HERI