What is the meaning of BLACKS. Phrases containing BLACKS
See meanings and uses of BLACKS!Slangs & AI meanings
Blacks listen to loud "thumping" music in their cars.
For blacks that ride in hoopties with loud systems and smoke marijuana
Yellow Eyed Nigger. These are Blacks, usually male, that due to a life of hard substance abuse have the whites of their eyes turn a hepatitis yellow.
Same vain as Point-Six. In reference to the 3/5ths Compromise, where the US Gov't decided that slaves (Blacks) only counted as 3/5ths of a person for population reasons.
Used by hockey players to make fun of blacks playing basketball.
White wall tires have a thin line of white. Used for blacks who pretend to be white.
Variation of "nigger" used by white people to degrade black people, now also used by blacks to speak of other blacks.
Used in reference to minorities in terms of location. Example: This neighborhhod was nice until the element moved in. Not necessarily specific to Blacks.
Stereotypical thought of blacks using voodoo.
amphetamine
Blacks who suck up to white people. In reference to the Uncle Tom character in the famous 1852 book "Uncle Tom's Cabin" by Harriet Beecher Stowe.
In prison, this is a widely used word for blacks.
A common practice of southerners was to hang blacks. When the wind blew and swung them back and forth against each other southerners would refer to them as windchimes.
Pronounced "we be", this refers to the inability of most blacks to conjugate the "be" verb, thus resulting in "we be" instead of "we are" when making references to themselves.
Nerdy Blacks. Character from "Family Matters" TV show.
British, short for Golliwogg, a stuffed doll that mimicked Blacks. Recently was dropped (ref) as the logo used on jars of Robertson's jams and marmalades.
A black guy who acts white. Used mostly to describe unathletic blacks, who, according to stereotypes, should be naturally good at sports
Blacks in the 1930s/1940s used to wear snazzy suits called zoot suits.
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Slangs & AI derived meanings
Laugh Out Loud or Laughing Out Loud.
Crying Real Big Tears
Turn over is slang for to rob.Turn over is British slang for to raid or search a premises.
to inject a drug
Son. He's awfully proud of his currant.
- Rhymes with "push". Slang word for your mouth as in "shut your mush". Also means mate as in "Alright mush?. Which means "Hi"!
Bag of sand is London Cockney rhyming slang for one thousand pounds (grand).
to rob someone in a public place
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n.
A mixture of spirituous liquor (usually rum) and molasses.
n. pl.
A pair of blacksmith's tongs.
v. t.
To overstock; especially, to put more cattle into, as a common, than the person has a right to do, or more than the herbage will sustain. Blackstone.
n.
Alt. of Blacksnake
n.
Work wrought by blacksmiths; -- so called in distinction from that wrought by whitesmiths.
n.
A smith who works in iron with a forge, and makes iron utensils, horseshoes, etc.
n.
One who holds or possesses lands, or other real estate, by any kind of right, whether in fee simple, in common, in severalty, for life, for years, or at will; also, one who has the occupation or temporary possession of lands or tenements the title of which is in another; -- correlative to landlord. See Citation from Blackstone, under Tenement, 2.
n.
The workshop of a smith, esp. a blacksmith; a smithery; a stithy.
n.
A servant at a hotel or elsewhere, who cleans and blacks the boots and shoes.
v. t.
A small anvil usually furnished with a tang to enter a hole in a bench top, -- used by tinsmiths, blacksmiths, etc., for light work, punching upon, etc.
n.
One who blacks boots.
n.
A tool employed by blacksmiths for punching or enlarging the nail holes in a horseshoe.
n.
A worker in iron; one who makes and repairs utensils of iron; a blacksmith.
n.
Bad port wine; any common wine of the Mediterranean; -- so called by sailors.
n.
One who forges with the hammer; one who works in metals; as, a blacksmith, goldsmith, silversmith, and the like.
n.
A blacksmith's fuller or chisel, having a square shank for insertion into a square hole in an anvil, called the hardy hole.
n.
A snake of a black color, of which two species are common in the United States, the Bascanium constrictor, or racer, sometimes six feet long, and the Scotophis Alleghaniensis, seven or eight feet long.
n.
One who, or that which, strikes; specifically, a blacksmith's helper who wields the sledge.
n.
A tool, variously shaped or grooved on the end or face, used by blacksmiths and other workers in metals, for shaping their work, whether sheet metal or forging, by holding the swage upon the work, or the work upon the swage, and striking with a sledge.
n.
A fish of the Pacific coast (Chromis, / Heliastes, punctipinnis), of a blackish color.
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