What is the meaning of CARLTON BANKS. Phrases containing CARLTON BANKS
See meanings and uses of CARLTON BANKS!Slangs & AI meanings
Amen−preacher is Jamaican slang for a carrion crow.
Charlton And Greenwich is London Cockney rhyming slang for spinach.
IMITATING CARTOON OR CLAY ANIMATION
carbon copy
Caroon is British slang for twenty−five pence.Caroon was is British slang for a crown (five shillings).
IMITATING CARTOON OR CLAY ANIMATION
Carlo Gatti is London Cockney rhyming slang for mad, eccentric (batty).
Barton is Dorset slang for an enclosed yard for cows.
half-sovereign, from the mid 1800s, for the same reasons as madza caroon.
Black males who behave like whites or talk very proper. "Fresh Prince of Bel-Air" reference.
Person with remarkably high forhead, bald person Derived from a character in 'Dan Dare' cartoon series, Eagle Comic.
"Screw you!" or "Go to hell!" used by the cartoon boy Bart Simpson in Matt Groening's "The Simpsons"
Look like cartoon bear cubs.
A cartoon "egg" peering over a brick wall, usually saying "Wot no school?" or similar.
half-a-crown (2/6) from the mid 1800s. A combination of medza, a corruption of Italian mezzo meaning half, and a mispronunciation or interpretation of crown. Madza caroon is an example of 'ligua franca' slang which in this context means langauge used or influenced by foreigners or immigrants, like a sort of pidgin or hybrid English-foreign slang, in this case mixed with Italian, which logically implies that much of the early usage was in the English Italian communities. Mezzo/madza was and is potentially confused with, and popularity supported by, the similar 'motsa' (see motsa entry).
short for cartoon
emaciated, worn-out horse likely soon to become carrion and so attractive to crows .
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a.
Of or pertaining to dead and putrefying carcasses; feeding on carrion.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Canton
n.
Carrion; any filth.
n.
The European carrion crow.
imp. & p. p.
of Canton
a.
Eating carrion.
n.
A design or study drawn of the full size, to serve as a model for transferring or copying; -- used in the making of mosaics, tapestries, fresco pantings and the like; as, the cartoons of Raphael.
n.
Any book printed by William Caxton, the first English printer.
n.
A dead body; carrion.
n.
A contemptible or worthless person; -- a term of reproach.
n.
A large pictorial sketch, as in a journal or magazine; esp. a pictorial caricature; as, the cartoons of "Puck."
a.
Feeding on carrion.
n.
The dead and putrefying body or flesh of an animal; flesh so corrupted as to be unfit for food.
n.
Dead body; carrion.
n.
An elementary substance, not metallic in its nature, which is present in all organic compounds. Atomic weight 11.97. Symbol C. it is combustible, and forms the base of lampblack and charcoal, and enters largely into mineral coals. In its pure crystallized state it constitutes the diamond, the hardest of known substances, occuring in monometric crystals like the octahedron, etc. Another modification is graphite, or blacklead, and in this it is soft, and occurs in hexagonal prisms or tables. When united with oxygen it forms carbon dioxide, commonly called carbonic acid, or carbonic oxide, according to the proportions of the oxygen; when united with hydrogen, it forms various compounds called hydrocarbons. Compare Diamond, and Graphite.
n.
Pasteboard for paper boxes; also, a pasteboard box.
n.
The carrion crow.
v. t.
To deprive of carbon; to remove the carbon from.
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