What is the meaning of bow and quiver. Phrases containing bow and quiver
See meanings and uses of bow and quiver!Slangs & AI meanings
bow and quiver
Slangs & AI derived meanings
Round trip meal ticket is American slang for to vomit
The phrase means 'have you got any dried bits of poo on your bum' ('Tatties' pronounced 'tay-tees') Though the contributor has no idea why the phrase was used!. (ed: maybe there was the faint aroma of 'fertiliser' in the air when they were about?)
Blue moon is London Cockney rhyming slang for spoon.
Carlo Gatti is London Cockney rhyming slang for mad, eccentric (batty).
Scavvy is British building−site slang for a scaffolder.
One that is open for sexual consideration.
I heard a woman on PBS's face The Nation discussing slang and "The Full Monty" was discussed. As an ex-Brit I understood it to refer to the full English breakfast that General Montgomery insisted upon daily, hence The Full... However she said that it came from a suit called a Montague which has three pieces and all the bells and whistles. Never heard of such a thing. What I do know is that Montague Burton is the largest chain of tailors in the UK. At the end of WW II and beyond, people leaving the armed services were given a week's pay and a voucher to take to Burtons for a new suit. Gradually the term "Going For a Burton" became synonymous with leaving, departing, and then evolved into dying as a result of an air crash or any other type of accent. It became very common with the National Servicemen (Draftees) of the 50's and 60's. It seems to have stayed with those generations. (ed: added verbatim - well done!)
Flaybottomist was th century British slang for a school teacher.
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