What is the meaning of POND LIFE. Phrases containing POND LIFE
See meanings and uses of POND LIFE!Slangs & AI meanings
bad smell ‘What a pong around here.’
Pound is Australian slang for a solitary−confinement cell or wing in a prison.
Ever wondered why Brits flounder when voicemail messages say to press the pound sign? What on earth is the British currency doing on a phone anyway? Well, it isn't. To a Brit, the pound sign is the wiggly thing we use to denote the UK pound (or quid), in the same way you have a dollar sign.
Ever wondered why Brits flounder when voicemail messages say to press the pound sign? What on earth is the British currency doing on a phone anyway? Well, it isn't. To a Brit, the pound sign is the wiggly thing we use to denote the UK pound (or quid), in the same way you have a dollar sign.
Pound note was old London Cockney rhyming slang for coat.
Strong. I need a ping pong drink
Pod is American slang for marijuana.
The Atlantic Ocean. ie. "We are going off with NATO, across "The Pond" and back."
Pound the ear is American tramp slang for to sleep
Pony is slang for a small glass of beer.Pony is British slang for twenty−five pounds sterling.
Pound one's weenie is slang for masturbation − applied to a man.
to pound or to pound down refers to drinking really fast and usually refers to beer or other alchoholic beverages.
Noun. 1. £25 sterling. 2. Rubbish, nonsense. E.g."Our team are a load of old pony and don't deserve to be in the final." 3. An act of defecation. E.g."Can you wait for me? I need to have a pony." 4. A piece of excrement. * Versions 2, 3 and 4 are from the rhyming slang pony and trap meaning 'crap'. See 'crap'.
Pound noteish was British slang for pompous, snobbish.
Pong is British slang for an unpleasent smell.Pong is derogatory Australian slang for an oriental.
twenty-five pounds (£25). From the late 18th century according to most sources, London slang, but the precise origin is not known. Also expressed in cockney rhying slang as 'macaroni'. It is suggested by some that the pony slang for £25 derives from the typical price paid for a small horse, but in those times £25 would have been an unusually high price for a pony. Others have suggested that an Indian twenty-five rupee banknote featured a pony. Another suggestion (Ack P Bessell) is that pony might derive from the Latin words 'legem pone', which (according to the etymology source emtymonline.com) means, "........ 'payment of money, cash down,' [which interpretation apparently first appeared in] 1573, from first two words [and also the subtitle] of the fifth division of Psalm cxix [Psalm 119, verses 33 to 48, from the Bible's Old Testament], which begins the psalms at Matins on the 25th of the month; consequently associated with March 25, a quarter day in the old financial calendar, when payments and debts came due...." The words 'Legem pone' do not translate literally into monetary meaning, in the Psalm they words actully seem to equate to 'Teach me..' which is the corresponding phrase in the King James edition of the Bible. Other suggestions connecting the word pony with money include the Old German word 'poniren' meaning to pay, and a strange expression from the early 1800s, "There's no touching her, even for a poney [sic]," which apparently referred to a widow, Mrs Robinson, both of which appear in a collection of 'answers to correspondents' sent by readers and published by the Daily Mail in the 1990s.
Crap. Ang on, mate. Just gotta 'ave a pony Or, another usage if something's a bit off (i.e.. not of good quality) - That's a bit pony mate!
The pound is Australian slang for a solitary−confinement cell or wing in a prison.
Noun. Person or persons of low intelligence, and not greatly evolved, as with creatures found in a pond. Derog.
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v. t.
To place under the conditions of a bond; to mortgage; to secure the payment of the duties on (goods or merchandise) by giving a bond.
n.
A genus of fresh-water air-breathing mollusks, abundant in ponds and streams; -- called also pond snail.
n.
The breaking of a public pound for releasing impounded animals.
v. t.
To comminute and pulverize by beating; to bruise or break into fine particles with a pestle or other heavy instrument; as, to pound spice or salt.
v. t.
To confine in, or as in, a pound; to impound.
pl.
of Pound
n.
The keeper of a pound.
n.
A pond for watering horses.
v. t.
To make into a pond; to collect, as water, in a pond by damming.
n.
The union or tie of the several stones or bricks forming a wall. The bricks may be arranged for this purpose in several different ways, as in English or block bond (Fig. 1), where one course consists of bricks with their ends toward the face of the wall, called headers, and the next course of bricks with their lengths parallel to the face of the wall, called stretchers; Flemish bond (Fig.2), where each course consists of headers and stretchers alternately, so laid as always to break joints; Cross bond, which differs from the English by the change of the second stretcher line so that its joints come in the middle of the first, and the same position of stretchers comes back every fifth line; Combined cross and English bond, where the inner part of the wall is laid in the one method, the outer in the other.
n.
A genus of fresh-water Pulmonifera, having reversed spiral shells. See Pond snail, under Pond.
superl.
Affectionate; loving; tender; -- in a good sense; as, a fond mother or wife.
n.
A small lake; a pond.
n.
A bridge; -- applied to several parts which connect others, but especially to the pons Varolii, a prominent band of nervous tissue situated on the ventral side of the medulla oblongata and connected at each side with the hemispheres of the cerebellum; the mesocephalon. See Brain.
n.
The state of goods placed in a bonded warehouse till the duties are paid; as, merchandise in bond.
pl.
of Tete-de-pont
n.
An instrument (of the nature of the ordinary legal bond) made by a government or a corporation for purpose of borrowing money; as, a government, city, or railway bond.
n.
A dirty pond.
v. i.
To be fond; to dote.
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