What is the meaning of TURBO. Phrases containing TURBO
See meanings and uses of TURBO!Slangs & AI meanings
Any ingenious machine — plane, car, or weapon — whose actual name can’t be recalled. Also “puppy,’ “bad boy.†The E2 Hawkeye early-warning aircraft is also nicknamed “Hummer,†in reference to the sound of its turboprop engines.
Marijuana and crack
A kind of bong made out of a 2 litre cider or coke bottle with the bottom cut off and replaced with a plastic bag or cling film attatched with tape and a gauze instead of a lid, then what is done, marajuana is burnt on the gauze and the bag is pulled down, then the gauze is removed and the smoke inhaled
Combination of crack cocaine and marijuana
crack and marijuana
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n.
A large European flounder (Rhombus maximus) highly esteemed as a food fish. It often weighs from thirty to forty pounds. Its color on the upper side is brownish with small roundish tubercles scattered over the surface. The lower, or blind, side is white. Called also bannock fluke.
a.
Like or pertaining to Turbo or the family Turbinidae.
n.
A marine shell of the genus Turbo. See Turbo.
n.
The trigger fish.
n.
Any one of numerous marine gastropods of the genus Turbo or family Turbinidae, usually having a turbinate shell, pearly on the inside, and a calcareous operculum.
n.
The filefish; -- so called in Bermuda.
n.
A fossil turbo.
n.
A fish allied to the turbot; the brill.
n.
The turbot.
n.
A thin, spotted American turbot (Pleuronectes maculatus) remarkable for its translucency. It is not valued as a food fish. Called also spotted turbot, daylight, spotted sand flounder, and water flounder.
n.
The turbot.
n.
Any fish of the family Pleuronectidae; esp., the winter flounder (Pleuronectes Americanus). The flatfishes have the body flattened, swim on the side, and have eyes on one side, as the flounder, turbot, and halibut. See Flounder.
n.
A fish of the turbot kind; the brill.
n.
A petrified shell resembling the genus Turbo.
n.
A fish allied to the turbot (Rhombus levis), much esteemed in England for food; -- called also bret, pearl, prill. See Bret.
n.
Any one of numerous species of flounders more or less related to the true turbots, as the American plaice, or summer flounder (see Flounder), the halibut, and the diamond flounder (Hypsopsetta guttulata) of California.
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