What is the meaning of SARAH GAMP. Phrases containing SARAH GAMP
See meanings and uses of SARAH GAMP!Slangs & AI meanings
Exclamation used to describe something exciting that is just starting
Phrs. Laughing. E.g."Sarah was in bulk all the way through the film." [Merseyside use]
v. A tern used in reference to having sex. "Aye yo Jonny! Sarah let me beat last night." 2. n. Violent physical abuse. "If that fool keeps talking all that smack, I'm gonna beat his a**."Â
Gamp is British slang for an umbrella.
Korean for "coal person"
Someone who is curiously attracted to members of the same sex. "Sara admitted last night that she is bicurious."Â
Saran Wrap Technique (aka “Glad Wrap Techinique†or “Shrink Wrap Techniqueâ€) Â
A form of nail art that creates a two-tone marble like design using saran wrap (not to be confused with water marbling.) There are 2 techniques used to create this look.
Exclamation of surprise. Popularised in Scooby-Doo by Shaggy using it constantly - "Zoinks Scoob!" - received a new lease of life when the film starring Sarah Michelle Geller was released. (ed: SMG was nice, but wasn't Velma totally sexy? Wow - I was impressed!)
Sarah Gamp is London Cockney rhyming slang for a lamp.
A list of words supposedly an 'introduction' to the language dialect used in South Africa: (ed: in no particular order!): Braai A braai is the first thing you will be invited to when you visit South Africa. It is a backyard all-weather barbecue. So you will have to go even if it's raining like mad and you have a hang of a cold. At a braai you will be introduced to a substance known as "mieliepap". Ag This one of the most useful South African words. Pronounced like the "ach" in "achtung", it can be used to start a reply when you are asked a tricky question, as in: "Ag, I don't know." Or a sense of resignation: "Ag, I'll have some more mieliepap then." It can stand alone too as a signal of irritation or of pleasure. Donner A rude word, from the Afrikaans "donder" (thunder). Pronounced "dorner", it means "beat up." Your rugby team can get donnered in a game, or your boss can donner you if you do a lousy job. Eina It means "ouch". Pronounced "aynah", you can shout it out in sympathy when someone burns his finger on a hot mielie at a braai. Hey Often used at the end of a sentence to emphasise the importance of what has just been said, as in "Jislaaik boet, you're only going to stop a lekker klap if you can't find your takkies now, hey?" It can also stand alone as a question. Instead of saying "excuse me?" or "pardon?" when you have not heard something directed at you, you can say: "Hey?" Isit? This is a great word in conversations. Afrikaner etymologists labored for several years in sterile conditions to devise a way of attaching the word 'is' to the word 'it' and enable South Africans to make intelligent conversation around the braai. Example: "The Russians will succeed in developing capitalism once they adopt a work ethic and respect for private ownership." "Isit?" Jawelnofine This is another conversation fallback word. Derived from the four words: "yes", "well", "no" and "fine", it means roughly "how about that." If your bank manager tells you your account is overdrawn, you can say with confidence: "Jawelnofine." Jislaaik Pronounced" Yis-like", it is an expression of astonishment. For instance,if someone tells you there are a billion people in China, a suitable comment is: "Jislaaik, that's a hang of a lot of people, hey?" Klap Pronounced "klup" - an Afrikaans word meaning smack, whack or spank. If you spend too much time at the bioscope at exam time, you could end up catching a sharp klap from your pa. In America, that is called child abuse. In South Africa, it is called promoting education. Lekker An Afrikaans word meaning nice, this word is used by all language groups to express approval. Gentlemen who spy someone of the opposite sex who is good-looking, may remark: "Lekk-errrrrrr!" Tackies These are sneakers or running shoes. Also used to describe automobile or truck tires. "Fat tackies" are big tires, as in: "Where did you get those lekker fat tackies on your Volksie, hey?" Dop This word has two basic meanings, one good and one bad. First the good. A dop is a drink, a cocktail, a sundowner, a noggin. If you are invited over for a dop, be careful. It could be one or two sedate drinks or a blast, depending on the company you have fallen in with. Now the bad: To dop is to fail. If you dopped Standard Two (Grade 4) more than once, you probably won't be reading this. Sarmie A sandwich. For generations, schoolchildren have traded sarmies during lunch breaks. If you are sending kids off to school in the morning, don't give them liver-polony sarmies. They are the toughest to trade. Bakkie This word is pronounced "bucky" and it is a small truck or pick-up. Young men can take their "cherrie" (girlfriend) to the drive-in bioscope in a bakkie but it is not always an appropriate form of transport because the seats don't recline and you may be forced to watch the film. Howzit A universal South African greeting, often used with the word "No" as in this exchange: "No, howzit?" "No, fine." "Isit?" Mrs Balls'. Chutney We don't know if the lady ever existed, but if she did she has earned a place of honour in South African kitchen history. South Africans eat it with everything, including fried egg.
Stuck up, high class, too good "Sarah acts bougie because her family has money."Â
A cook who fits food into pots and turns it into shit. (ed: stolen unashamedly from Sarah Henderson - brilliant stuff.)
An accronym popularly used in texting, meaning “By The Way." "BTW I saw your brother at the club last night with Sara."Â
When you act like you are better than or too good for someone. "Since Sarah moved away from the hood she now acts so hollywood."Â
v. a girl dance involving a girl shaking or rubbing their booty on a boy. "Sarah twurked on Jimmy at that party last night."Â
Adj. True. Adv. Truthfully, honestly. E.g."Honestly, I didn't touch it Sarah, straight up."
To display extreme enthusiasm, excitement, anger or distress. We used this alot, "Omigod, I was at the mall buying back to school clothes and I went totally house." Or you could say, "Did you hear? Sara and Jane were fighting in the bathroom and Sara went totally house on her!"
SARAH GAMP
SARAH GAMP
SARAH GAMP
Sarah or Sairey Gamp, Mrs. Gamp as she is more commonly known, is a nurse in the novel Martin Chuzzlewit by Charles Dickens, first published as a serial
care in his 1843–1844 published novel Martin Chuzzlewit in the figure of Sarah Gamp as being incompetent, negligent, alcoholic and corrupt. According to Caroline
Gamp is a colloquial, primarily British, dated or obsolete term for an umbrella, after the Dickens character Sarah Gamp. GAMP may refer to: Girard Academic
installments. Characters in this novel gained fame, including Pecksniff and Mrs Gamp. Like nearly all of Dickens's novels, Martin Chuzzlewit was first published
of his picaresque novels, was serialised. It includes the character of Sarah Gamp, a nurse who is dissolute, sloppy and generally drunk, and also features
shock in the event of Anthony's sudden death and sleazy private nurse Sarah Gamp is hired to care for him. Paul Scofield as Old Martin Chuzzlewit / Anthony
James Gamble and William Procter – Procter & Gamble Sarah Gamp, British literary character – gamp Mahatma Gandhi, Indian activist – Gandhism, Gandhian
dissolute drunk. The image of a drunk nurse was exemplified by Dickens' Sarah Gamp. The nurse in this image is depicted as a moral, noble and religious being
killed off in the fourth series in 2014. In late 2015, she appeared as Mrs Gamp in the BBC TV series Dickensian. Collins was appointed an Officer of the
Queen's Theatre he played Sam Slap in The Rake's Progress (1833) and Sarah Gamp in Martin Chuzzlewit (1844) in a production authorised by Charles Dickens
SARAH GAMP
SARAH GAMP
SARAH GAMP
SARAH GAMP
n.
A soft twilled silk fabric much used for women's dresses; -- called also surah silk.
SARAH GAMP
SARAH GAMP
SARAH GAMP