What is the meaning of ROO BAR. Phrases containing ROO BAR
See meanings and uses of ROO BAR!Slangs & AI meanings
Poo-Poo (Feces are black or brown in color.)
Rob is slang for steal.
n Idioms: go through the roof 1. To grow, intensify, or rise to an enormous, often unexpected degree: Operating costs went through the roof last year. 2. To become extremely angry: When I told her about breaking the window, she went through the roof. raise the roof 1. To be extremely noisy and boisterous: They raised the roof at the party. 2. To complain loudly and bitterly: Angry tenants finally raised the roof about their noisy neighbors.
Rob Roy was late th century London Cockney rhyming slang for a boy.
Poo is British slang for excrement. Poo is British slang for shampoo. Poo is British slang for champagne.
Rot is slang for nonsense. Rot is Dorset slang for a rat.Rot was Victorian slang for ridicule.
Loo is British slang for a lavatory.
Joe Rok is London Cockney rhyming slang for book. Joe Rook is London Cockney rhyming slang for crook.
Roo is slang for kangaroo.
Zoo is Dorset slang for so.
Row is slang for attack or assail.
Foo Foo is slang for cocaine.
n. (derived from fool) a friend. "Whasup foo?" 2. an insulting name for someone. "What you lookin' at foo?"Â
Rio is slang for a thousand.
Boo Boo Bama is slang for cannabis.
Raffing Out Roud (in scooby-doo dialect)
Roe is British slang for semen.
ROO BAR
ROO BAR
ROO BAR
ROO BAR
ROO BAR
ROO BAR
ROO BAR
n.
A room for retirement from another room, as from a dining room; a drawing-room.
v. i.
To use the oar; as, to row well.
v. i.
To fix the root; to enter the earth, as roots; to take root and begin to grow.
v. t.
To beat in the game of loo by winning every trick.
v. t.
To tear up by the root; to eradicate; to extirpate; -- with up, out, or away.
adv.
Over; more than enough; -- noting excess; as, a thing is too long, too short, or too wide; too high; too many; too much.
n.
A room appropriated for the reception of company; a room to which company withdraws from the dining room.
n.
A private room or apartment.
v. i.
To occupy a room or rooms; to lodge; as, they arranged to room together.
v. t.
To transport in a boat propelled with oars; as, to row the captain ashore in his barge.
n.
A measure of five and a half yards in length; a rod; a perch; a pole.
n.
See Christcross-row.
n.
That which resembles, or corresponds to, the covering or the ceiling of a house; as, the roof of a cavern; the roof of the mouth.
n.
A disease or decay in fruits, leaves, or wood, supposed to be caused by minute fungi. See Bitter rot, Black rot, etc., below.
n.
A series of persons or things arranged in a continued line; a line; a rank; a file; as, a row of trees; a row of houses or columns.
v. t.
To cover with a roof.
n.
Unobstructed spase; space which may be occupied by or devoted to any object; compass; extent of place, great or small; as, there is not room for a house; the table takes up too much room.
n.
An edible or esculent root, especially of such plants as produce a single root, as the beet, carrot, etc.; as, the root crop.
n.
That factor of a quantity which when multiplied into itself will produce that quantity; thus, 3 is a root of 9, because 3 multiplied into itself produces 9; 3 is the cube root of 27.
ROO BAR
ROO BAR
ROO BAR