What is the meaning of KENTUCKY BLUE. Phrases containing KENTUCKY BLUE
See meanings and uses of KENTUCKY BLUE!Slangs & AI meanings
Refers to Colonel Sanders. Blacks are thought to love Kentucky Fried Chicken.
When a man wraps his penis completley around a womans wrist (sometimes twice around!). I have no idea what the point of this is, maybe to show off length??? All I know is that male strippers in New Orleans, Louisiana do it to female lap dance patrons, along with other displays of "talent" that can only be considered highly odd. Now people can be considered fairly well warned in case anyone ever asks them if they want one. (ed: what do you call it when you can only wrap it round your little finger once?)
The blue and white flag (Papa flag) that is flown on a ship ready to sail. This flag at the mainmast is known as the signal to recall everyone to his ship.
Shoes. Get your rhythm and blues on
The nickname for a native of Kentucky.
Dispirited. "I have the blue devils today.â€
Delayed by car inspectors. A blue flag or blue light is placed on cars thus delayed and being worked on
A plastic eating utensil that is both a spoon and a fork. Possibly first available at Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurants.
  Penny
An excessively puritanical person, a prude, Creator of "the Blue Nozzle Curse.".
Marijuana
A small trailer located in the older suburb of the city of Sydney, called Woolloomooloo. This small eating-house offers (The best!) hot pies, topped with mushie peas and has become a famous Sydney landmark. Among the list of famous people to eat there includes Colonel Sanders of Kentucky fried chicken fame, Olivia Newton John, and many other celebrities and movie stars
Old myth that if one were bitten by a nigger with blue gums, they would die.
A mullet haircut, in homage to the state of Kentucky, where often a mullet is found. (ed: ok but what does it look like compared to the normal mullet?)
A warship that has operated inside the Arctic Circle gets blue paint added to the bow to show this fact. People who served in the ship are awarded a Bluenose Certificate. Not to be confused with those from Nova Scotia who consider themselves "Bluenosers" or the schooner named "Bluenose".
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a.
Deep blue, like smalt.
n.
See Saunders-blue.
n.
A singing bird of northern Europe and Asia (Cyanecula Suecica), related to the nightingales; -- called also blue-throated robin and blue-throated warbler.
n.
A genus of grasses, including a great number of species, as the kinds called meadow grass, Kentucky blue grass, June grass, and spear grass (which see).
n.
A dark blue, edible berry with a white bloom, and its shrub (Gaylussacia frondosa) closely allied to the common huckleberry. The bush is also called blue tangle, and is found from New England to Kentucky, and southward.
n.
One of the United States.
a.
Of inflexible honesty and fidelity; -- a term derived from the true, or Coventry, blue, formerly celebrated for its unchanging color. See True blue, under Blue.
n.
A grayish blue building stone, as that commonly used in the eastern United States.
a.
A name given to several different species of plants having blue flowers, as the Houstonia coerulea, the Centaurea cyanus or bluebottle, and the Vaccinium angustifolium.
n.
A genus of leguminous plants; the Kentucky coffee tree. The leaves are cathartic, and the seeds a substitute for coffee.
n.
One of a order of nuns founded in 1812 at Loretto, in Kentucky. The members of the order (called also Sisters of Loretto, or Friends of Mary at the Foot of the Cross) devote themselves to the cause of education and the care of destitute orphans, their labors being chiefly confined to the Western United States.
n.
A small fish (Amblyopsis spelaeus) destitute of eyes, found in the waters of the Mammoth Cave, in Kentucky. Related fishes from other caves take the same name.
n.
The blue-winged teal. See Teal.
n.
A kind of color prepared from calcined lapis lazuli; ultramarine; also, a blue prepared from carbonate of copper.
a.
Having the blue color of the sky; azure; as, a sky-blue stone.
n.
A monk belonging to a branch of the Cistercian Order, which was established by Armand de Rance in 1660 at the monastery of La Trappe in Normandy. Extreme austerity characterizes their discipline. They were introduced permanently into the United States in 1848, and have monasteries in Iowa and Kentucky.
n.
Blue vitriol.
a.
Having blue veins or blue streaks.
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