What is the meaning of BARS. Phrases containing BARS
See meanings and uses of BARS!Slangs & AI meanings
A group of Alcoholics, One who frequents gay bars and nightclubs.
A person who frequents gay bars. Use humorously or with derisive intent. ("Meet you at Crossroads as usual, you boozehag." or "They open at noon for the boozehag crowd.").
Track laborer. Name may have originated from the gander-like tremulations of a man tamping ties, or from the old Gandy Manufacturing Company of Chicago, which made tamping bars, claw bars, picks, and shovels
Heroin mixed with alprazolam
A Lieutenant-Commander who's rank insignia shows two thick bars with one half bar in the middle.
adv. how one's jaw feels when it and the handle bars attempt to occupy the same space and time. "Fuck!" "Pray, whats wrong?" "I've got mandibular disharmony."
One who frequents gay bars and nightclubs. Synonyms.
n. a face plant. "Look at that guy on that gnarly single track... he's going to go over the bars and do a digger."
Completely controlled by ones sexual drive. Always seeking sex, you find this type cruising parks, rest stops, Bathhouses, bars, and sex clubs.
Candy bars. This term was definitely borrowed from the USN.
A reference to the notion that all homophobia would end if everyone who was gay or bisexual would turn blue (or wear a blue dot on their forehead) for just one day. This idea is duscussed in the short story "Am I Blue?" by Bruce Coville, where it is referred to as the Third Great Gay Fantasy (Am I Blue? Coming Out from the Silence, ed. Marion Dane Bauer, HarperTrophy, a short story collection for LGB youth), and in Bingo by Rita Mae Brown. Musician Tori Amos also used this reference in the song "Hey Jupiter" on Boys for Pele when she asked, "So are you gay? Are you blue?" (Tori Amos, while straight, is a great friend to the gay community and has been since she started playing in gay bars at the age of 12.).
Short movable bars of iron or hard wood to which running rigging may be secured, or belayed.
Male prostitute who works or solicits his customers in bars.
Barsy is British slang for mad, a lunatic.
a rap song, part of a song, as in “spit some bars†(to sing something)
Barse is British slang for the perineum.
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v. t.
To remove a bar or bars from; to unbolt; to open; as, to unbar a gate.
n.
A frame consisting of two bars crossing each other at right angles and turning on a post or pin, to hinder the passage of beasts, but admitting a person to pass between the arms; a turnstile. See Turnstile, 1.
v. t.
To take the spars, stakes, or bars from.
n.
A rope used to retain the bars of the capstan in their sockets while men are turning it.
n.
The framing in which the panes of glass are set in a glazed window or door, including the narrow bars between the panes.
n.
One of two strong bars of timber, fixed horizontally on the opposite sides of the masthead, to support the crosstrees and the frame of the top; -- generally used in the plural.
a.
Resembling a ladder in form or appearance; having transverse bars or markings like the rounds of a ladder; as, the scalariform cells and scalariform pits in some plants.
n.
One of the cylindrical bars of a lantern wheel; one of the bars or rounds of a rack, a ladder, etc.
n.
The radius or ray of a wheel; one of the small bars which are inserted in the hub, or nave, and which serve to support the rim or felly.
n.
A form of weighing machine for heavy wares, consisting of two horizontal bars crossing each other, beaked at the extremities, and supported by a wooden pillar. It is now mostly disused.
v. i.
One of the bars of a lantern wheel.
n.
One of the side bars of a pair of spectacles, jointed to the bows, and passing one on either side of the head to hold the spectacles in place.
n.
A similar decoration in some styles of vaulting, the ribs of the vault giving off the minor bars of which the tracery is composed.
n.
One of the end bars by which the lay of a hand loom is suspended.
v.
A large ladle for molten metal, fitted with long bars for handling it.
n.
An instrument of extreme sensibility, used to determine slight differences and degrees of heat. It is composed of alternate bars of antimony and bismuth, or any two metals having different capacities for the conduction of heat, connected with an astatic galvanometer, which is very sensibly affected by the electric current induced in the system of bars when exposed even to the feeblest degrees of heat.
n.
A sciaenoid food fish (Liostomus xanthurus) of the Atlantic coast of the United States. It has a black spot behind the shoulders and fifteen oblique dark bars on the sides. Called also goody, Lafayette, masooka, and old wife.
n.
An instrument consisting of small bars of wood, flat at the bottom and rounded at the top, and resting on the edges of a kind of open box. They are unequal in size, gradually increasing from the smallest to the largest, and are tuned to the diatonic scale. The tones are produced by striking the pieces of wood with hard balls attached to flexible sticks.
v. t.
To put together so as to make one; to join, as two or more constituents, to form a whole; to combine; to connect; to join; to cause to adhere; as, to unite bricks by mortar; to unite iron bars by welding; to unite two armies.
v. t.
To remove or detach, as any part or implement, from its proper position or connection when in use; as, to unship an oar; to unship capstan bars; to unship the tiller.
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