What is the meaning of CONE. Phrases containing CONE
See meanings and uses of CONE!Slangs & AI meanings
Pine cones. Contributor says he has absolutly no idea why the word was used or why we would talk about pine cones.
Either during dinner or directly outside the school gates, along with white dog turds and shredded pornography (if there was a park or alley near to your school), there was an ice cream van that used to sell a Popeye - essentially a small ice cream cone (or 'cornet') but where a flake insertion would produce a "99" alternatively a thin fruit lolly was stuck in (invariably one half of those 'double lollies' which had 2 sticks, snapped in half lengthways) - no idea in hell why it was called a Popeye, anyone know? But also a name called to any one during the course of 'play'/'break' who had something long (stick/ cricket bat/long boot bag, stuffed down the back of their coat at the neck, thus resembling (vaguely at best), said ice cream.
n. the bowl of a bong where marijuana is placed in to smoke. "All I need is a cone and I’ll be stress free for the rest of the night."Â
(n.) Any attack that hits within the frontal cone of a monster.
A term which is abbreviated jargon for the latissimus dorsi. This Latin term translates roughly into 'lateral muscles of the back'. When viewed from the rear, and relaxed, the lats form large. inverted cones.
Coner is slang for a pickpocket who makes contact by dropping an ice−cream at his victim's feet.
Conehead is American slang for a strange and foolish person.
Lethal Cone, Cone of Vulnerability
Area to the rear of the jet’s tailpipe, into which most infrared missile and gun attacks are ideally launched.
A device to slow a boat down in a storm so that it does not speed excessively down the slope of a wave and crash into the next one. It is generally constructed of heavy flexible material in the shape of a cone. See also sea anchor.
A cone shaped plastic container filled with ice cream that had a bubble gum at the pointy end.
Students, short for coneheads: also called nurkin heads, or studs.
Snow Cone is slang for cocaine.
STREEVUS MONE ON THE REEVUS CONE
Streevus mone on the reevus cone is Black−American slang for a jitterbug expression that has no meaning.
Ice cream with bubblegum in the bottom in a Dalek-shaped plastic cone. Filthy name, and rumoured to contain LSD.
A type of navigational buoy often cone shaped, but if not, always triangular in silhouette. Resembles a nun's hat.
CONE
CONE
CONE
CONE
CONE
CONE
CONE
a.
Having the shape of a top; (Bot.) cone-shaped, with the apex downward; turbinate.
n.
A staff entwined with ivy, and surmounted by a pine cone, or by a bunch of vine or ivy leaves with grapes or berries. It is an attribute of Bacchus, and of the satyrs and others engaging in Bacchic rites.
n.
A solid of the form described by the revolution of a right-angled triangle about one of the sides adjacent to the right angle; -- called also a right cone. More generally, any solid having a vertical point and bounded by a surface which is described by a straight line always passing through that vertical point; a solid having a circle for its base and tapering to a point or vertex.
n.
One of the soft gelatinous cones found in the compound eyes of certain insects, taking the place of the crystalline cones of others.
n.
A rare alkaloid found in the bark of an East Indian apocynaceous tree (Wrightia antidysenterica), and extracted as a bitter white crystalline substance. It was formerly used as a remedy for diarrh/a. Called also conessine, and neriine.
n.
A small appendage like a rudimentary leaf, resembling the scales of a fish in form, and often in arrangement; as, the scale of a bud, of a pine cone, and the like. The name is also given to the chaff on the stems of ferns.
a.
Having the axis inclined to the base, as a cone.
n.
A cone of paper which is placed in a vessel of lard or other fat, and used as a taper.
n.pl.
A division of marine gastropod mollusks in which the radula are converted into poison fangs. The cone shells (Conus), Pleurotoma, and Terebra, are examples. See Illust. of Cone, n., 4, Pleurotoma, and Terebra.
n.
An evergreen tree (Taxus baccata) of Europe, allied to the pines, but having a peculiar berrylike fruit instead of a cone. It frequently grows in British churchyards.
a.
Consisting of a series of parallel cones, each made up of many concentric cones closely packed together; -- said of a kind of structure sometimes observed in sedimentary rocks.
n.
Alt. of Conepatl
n.
A section or part of a cylinder, cone, or other solid of revolution, cut off by a plane oblique to the base; -- so called from its resemblance to the hoof of a horse.
n.
A tubular cone for expanding a flue; -- called ferrule in England.
a.
Shaped like a top, or inverted cone; narrow at the base, and broad at the apex; as, a turbinated ovary, pericarp, or root.
a.
Upright; erect from a base; having an upright axis; not oblique; as, right ascension; a right pyramid or cone.
n.
A large truncated cone of refined sugar.
n.
A pit in the form of an inverted cone or pyramid, constructed as an obstacle to the approach of an enemy, and having a pointed stake in the middle. The pits are called also trapholes.
v. t.
To render cone-shaped; to bevel like the circular segment of a cone; as, to cone the tires of car wheels.
n.
Anything shaped more or less like a mathematical cone; as, a volcanic cone, a collection of scoriae around the crater of a volcano, usually heaped up in a conical form.
CONE
CONE
CONE