What is the meaning of TEETH. Phrases containing TEETH
See meanings and uses of TEETH!Slangs & AI meanings
cocaine
Phrs. Very rare, non existent. From hens not having teeth.
Blow job, to suck a penis. [I came home to find the paper boy, brushing the teeth of my lover].
All tits and teeth is derogatory British slang for a woman who gets on by using her physical attributes rather than her brain. An attractive but stupid woman.
Term given when you make that sucking/kissing sound against your teeth when you're pissed off at something. Maybe it's a Sarf Lahndon thing. This was popularised over the last 10 years by Jerry Seingeld's habit of doing it on his show.
crack
n 1. The technical skill with which a jazz or rock musician performs. 2. Teeth: Don't bust my chops.
TEETH
Slangs & AI derived meanings
Slack is slang for a prostitute. Slack is slang for to urinate.Slack is Jamaican slang for immoral.
What?
Heroin; to inject a drug
Out of one's head is slang for crazy.Out of one's head is slang for intoxicated by drugs or drink.
Homosexual who cruise's the beach in the summer months.
LSD
Flea raker is British slang for a combe.
Trombones is bingo slang for the number seventy−six.
Extremely scared, agitated or nervous. Implies defecation into the underwear. e.g. - 'he was totally bricking it'. Derived from the expression 'to shit bricks'.
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v. i.
To bare or gnash the teeth.
n.
One of the elongated incisor or canine teeth of the wild boar, elephant, etc.; hence, any long, protruding tooth.
a.
Having three teeth or prongs; tridentate.
n.
A machine for cleansing or loosening wool by the action of a revolving cylinder covered with long iron spikes or teeth; a willy or willying machine; -- called also twilly devil, and devil. See Devil, n., 6, and Willy.
n.
Either one of two or more species of South American blood-sucking bats belonging to the genera Desmodus and Diphylla. These bats are destitute of molar teeth, but have strong, sharp cutting incisors with which they make punctured wounds from which they suck the blood of horses, cattle, and other animals, as well as man, chiefly during sleep. They have a caecal appendage to the stomach, in which the blood with which they gorge themselves is stored.
a.
Having three teeth; three-toothed.
a.
Having the form or appearance of villi; like close-set fibers, either hard or soft; as, the teeth of perch are villiform.
v. t.
To take out the teeth of.
n.
An instrument with a hinged claw, -- used for extracting teeth with a twist.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Teeth
n.
The wheel in an escapement (as of a clock or a watch) into the teeth of which the pallets play.
n.
A long, pointed tooth; a tusk; -- applied especially to certain teeth of horses.
a.
Having the lower incisor teeth projecting beyond the upper ones, as in the bulldog.
a.
Having teeth traversed by canals; -- said of certain edentates.
imp. & p. p.
of Teeth
n.
The process of the first growth of teeth, or the phenomena attending their issue through the gums; dentition.
v. i.
To breed, or grow, teeth.
n.
Any one of numerous species of small land snails belonging to the genus Vertigo, having an elongated or conical spiral shell and usually teeth in the aperture.
n.
One who, or that which, scales; specifically, a dentist's instrument for removing tartar from the teeth.
v. t.
To charge with something wrong or disgraceful; to reproach; to cast something in the teeth of; -- followed by with or for, and formerly of, before the thing imputed.
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