What is the meaning of LYRE BIRD. Phrases containing LYRE BIRD
See meanings and uses of LYRE BIRD!Slangs & AI meanings
Someone who adopts a fictional online profile and identity in order to lure people into deceptive romantic relationships.
Billy Liar is London Cockney rhyming slang for a tyre.
marijuana.Â
Dunlop tyre is London Cockney rhyming slang for liar.
n tire. The black rubber things around the wheels of your car. The British spelling in this particular instance is, well, curious.
Liar. 'e's a bit of a dunlop
Liar
Love You Forever
Noun. A roll of fat around one's midrift. [1920s] {Informal}
Spurious BMX trick in which you got onto one tyre and bounced up and down.
Learn Once, Repeat Everywhere
Heavily armed merchant ships with concealed weaponry, designed to lure submarines into making surface attacks. Used largely during WWI.
Derived from "conk", a lye-straightened hairdo popularized in the 1920s by Cab Calloway.
Kojak is British slang for a bald tyre.
Rubber is slang for a condom. Rubber is slang for a car tyre.
Bald tyre bandit is slang for a traffic policeman.
Tate and Lyle is London Cockney rhyming slang for audacity (style).
Verb. To depart quickly. Derived from burning tyre rubber from excessive acceleration with a motor vehicle.
[from lysergic acid] LSD
LYRE BIRD
Slangs & AI derived meanings
1. A floating barrier to control navigation into and out of rivers and harbours. 2. A spar attached to a mast at one end.
A reference to the ghetto, i.e. uneducated Black criminals hanging around the streets day and night, along with the speed of young black males, like Cheetahs, the fastest animals in the jungle.
Tushie is American slang for the backside, buttocks.
Synchronize.
Do You Remember
An effeminate or homosexual male.
Pogey is canadian slang for financial or other relief given to the unemployed by the government; dole.
a pound (£1). Not pluralised for a number of pounds, eg., 'It cost me twenty nicker..' From the early 1900s, London slang, precise origin unknown. Possibly connected to the use of nickel in the minting of coins, and to the American slang use of nickel to mean a $5 dollar note, which at the late 1800s was valued not far from a pound. In the US a nickel is more commonly a five cent coin. A nicker bit is a one pound coin, and London cockney rhyming slang uses the expression 'nicker bits' to describe a case of diarrhoea.
The largest end.
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n.
A northern constellation, the Harp, containing a white star of the first magnitude, called Alpha Lyrae, or Vega.
n.
A stringed instrument of music; a kind of harp much used by the ancients, as an accompaniment to poetry.
imp. & p. p.
of Lure
n.
A constellation; Lyra, or the Lyre.
n.
A lyre with seven chords.
n.
A kind of triangular lyre or harp.
a.
Shaped like a lyre, as the tail of the blackcock, or that of the lyre bird.
n.
The lyre bird.
v. t.
That which is or may be learned or known; the knowledge gained from tradition, books, or experience; often, the whole body of knowledge possessed by a people or class of people, or pertaining to a particular subject; as, the lore of the Egyptians; priestly lore; legal lore; folklore.
n.
Lore; learning.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Lure
n.
To draw to the lure; hence, to allure or invite by means of anything that promises pleasure or advantage; to entice; to attract.
n.
A journey in circuit of certain judges called justices in eyre (or in itinere).
n.
An ancient Greek instrument resembling a lyre.
n.
One of the constellations; Lyra. See Lyra.
n.
Learning; lesson; lore.
n.
A kind of lyre used by the Greeks.
a.
Of or pertaining to a lyre or harp.
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