What is the meaning of GEORGIUM SIDUS. Phrases containing GEORGIUM SIDUS
See meanings and uses of GEORGIUM SIDUS!Slangs & AI meanings
Georgie for 'Hey you!'. Using this you can create strange attention-getting sentences, e.g. 'How Lisa man giz a tab man how?' or 'How man Lisa giz a tab?', i.e. 'Hey Lisa give me a cigarette?'.
Georgia home boy is slang for Gamma Hydroxy Butyrate.
Peach pie
v. Term meaning to oral sex. Referring to the Georgia Dome (another slang for oral sex is ‘dome’) thus, the hint ‘getting Georgia. "Hey did you get some Georgia from that chick last night?"Â
Peach pie
Originally from Scots but also in Geordie. Possibly derived from 'loanin' which might have had to do with an old system for loaning plots of land, or perhaps "a sheltered place where cows were gathered for milking". I think we need some further input on this before we can be definitive.. To the contributor it meant a shortcut that was usually grassy and covered in dog poo, often an old railway line or grassy lane that you'd maybe use as a shortcut to get to school. (ed: on the other hand... Burno tells us that in Georgie, 'Lonnen' just means a lane. Seems there's a road called 'Lonnen' in a town local to him... but he didn't say which one)
Heard used by white southern Georgia farmers to describe blacks. The origin is that blacks are always being arrested and being hand"cuffed" by the police.
Be my Georgie Best is a slang expression of encouragement.
Gamma hydroxybutyrate (GHB)
Cola with chocolate syrup
Buttocks. An unusual word heard on U.S. sitcoms but with an obscure derivation. One guess was of a corruption of the German word "Hind" (similarly with the word "hinterland). Use of the word can be controversial. Parents use it, e.g. to tell a child "You'll get a smack on your hiney!! Also used in a friendly way to refer to a man's butt, When it's used to refer to a woman's (especially attractive, etc.) behind, then it has a very definite sexually suggestive connotation to it ("woman-child"), and the word used in that context appears to be fairly unacceptable. (ed: I asked for any counter arguments). Caroline writes: I think it is a shortening of "hind end", but it's used a lot in Southern USA. Here is a schoolyard rhyme: I see your hiney so black and shiny, You better hide it before I bite it!" The following fairly comprehensive description of the word in use was sent in by John Gaither from Athens Georgia US: It is (or was, when I was in the single-digit years, before 1965) common in south Georgia, in the southeastern US. Among me and my friends (European Americans) the rhyme was: "I see your hiney So black and shiny It makes me giggle To see it wiggle." My wife (African American) recalls it thus: "I see your hiney So bright and shiny. . . ." The occasion for its recitation was when someone's "hind" end was partly or fully exposed, either by circumstance or design. It was slightly pejorative, as if the singer was laughing at or mocking the person exposed; using the word "black" fits in with this, as calling someone black was also a derogatory statement (for Americans of either European or African ancestry). I conjecture an African American origin, or association with African Americans, from the word "black." (As you may or may not know, skin pigmentation among African Americans is in fact usually darker on the buttocks and the back of the thighs; cf. "kiss my black ass."). It was always sung to the same tune, which makes me wonder if the rhyme originated in some kind of vaudeville or minstrel show, where American performers of European ancestry sometimes wore blackface and used the exaggerated mannerisms and accents of African Americans to comic effect. The rhythm and tune are as follows, as best as I can render it. three eighth-notes, quarter note, dotted quarter note three eighth-notes, quarter note, dotted quarter note (repeat) C-C-C-C-A C-C-C-C-G C-C-C-C-A C-C-C-C-G
Cola with chocolate syrup
Specifically a derogatory term referring to the Gullah culture of African ex-slaves on the Atlantic coast of South Carolina/Georgia/Northern Florida.
Chest. (In football) Over 'ere son, on me Georgie . George Best is a famous footballer
Georgia credit card is American slang for a siphon used to steal fuel from another car's tank.
gamma-hydroxybutyrate. See GHB
Georgie Best is London Cockney rhyming slang for guest. Georgie Best is London Cockney rhyming slang for pest.
GEORGIUM SIDUS
Slangs & AI derived meanings
The drink is British slang for the sea.The drink was London docker slang for the river Thames.
Capon is slang for a young homosexual man.Capon is slang for a false trail, a false clue, a red herring.Capon is slang for a bloater.Capon was old slang for a eunuch.
Can't Be Bothered
Pennyboy is Irish slang for an employee whose duties include menial tasks, such as running errands.
Quandong is Australian slang for a woman.
Phrase meaning 'all is well'.
Noun. Proceeding quickly. E.g."Now we have some up to date machinery we are motoring through the work schedule."
Verb. To ruin something, to mess up. E.g."You really mucked that up didn't you?"
Spadger is Dorset slang for a sparrow.
Ubiquitous insult used by kids from the various secondary modern schools against us Grammar School kids (one of the last in the country) if you were spotted in your uniform. The reply was usually "Thicko!" - esp. if you were in a gang or feeling brave/suicidal/a good runner and on your own.
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a.
Of or relating to the reigns of the four Georges, kings of Great Britan; as, the Georgian era.
n.
A native of, or dweller in, Georgia.
n. pl.
A tribe or confederacy of North American Indians, including the Muskogees, Seminoles, Uchees, and other subordinate tribes. They formerly inhabited Georgia, Florida, and Alabama.
n.
A nickname given to any "poor white" living in the pine woods which cover the sandy hills in Georgia and South Carolina.
a.
Of or pertaining to Georgia, in Asia, or to Georgia, one of the United States.
n. pl.
A powerful tribe of North American Indians that formerly occupied the region of Georgia, Florida, and Alabama. They constituted a large part of the Creek confederacy.
a.
A rural poem; a poetical composition on husbandry, containing rules for cultivating lands, etc.; as, the Georgics of Virgil.
a.
Of or pertaining to certain islands along the coast of South Carolina and Georgia; as, sea-island cotton, a superior cotton of long fiber produced on those islands.
a.
Alt. of Georgical
n.
A native or inhabitant of the Caucasus, esp. a Circassian or Georgian.
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