What is the meaning of FEWS AND-TWOS. Phrases containing FEWS AND-TWOS
See meanings and uses of FEWS AND-TWOS!Slangs & AI meanings
Few tickers is Black−American slang for a few minutes.
Garbage fees is American real estate slang for expensive fees charged by lenders at the closing of the sale of a property.
Peddler who sells magazines, candy, fruit, 'etc., in trains. Usually employed nowadays by Union News Co. Thomas A. Edison, the inventor, was a news butcher in his youth and became deaf when a conductor boxed his ears for accidentally starting a fire while experimenting in a baggage car near Smith Creek, Mich.
To have a few drinks
Evening news is London Cockney rhyming slang for bruise.
drink a few beers ‘Let’s go and down a few.’
Fess up is American slang for confess, own up.
Holy Land is British slang for an area populated by Jews (originally Whitechapel in London).
Fews and twos is Black−American slang for a small sum of money.
Yews is Polari slang for eyes.
News of the world is British slang for a gossip.
News of the Screws is British slang for the News of the World newspaper.
Bad news is slang for someone or something regarded as undesirable.
Good news is British slang for sexual intercourse.
News that has already been heard or told before.
n a short, narrow (often cobbled) street. The word traditionally meant a stable that had been converted into a house, but is now only used to refer to the sort of street they would have been on. Mews houses in central London tend to afford some peace and quiet, and are therefore highly sought after and breathtakingly expensive.
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n.
One of a body of devoted Jews who opposed the Hellenistic Jews, and supported the Asmoneans.
conj.
In order to; -- used instead of the infinitival to, especially after try, come, go.
v. t.
To catch and bring to shore; to capture; as, to land a fish.
n.
One who runs house to house, tattling and telling news; an idle tattler.
n.
Tracts of land consisting of sand, like the deserts of Arabia and Africa; also, extensive tracts of sand exposed by the ebb of the tide.
n
A bearer of news; a courier; a newspaper.
superl.
Not many; small, limited, or confined in number; -- indicating a small portion of units or individuals constituing a whole; often, by ellipsis of a noun, a few people.
conj.
It is sometimes, in old songs, a mere expletive.
n.
One who deals in news; one who is active in hearing and telling news.
n.
Prison fees.
n.
A writer of news, or an officer appointed to publish news by authority.
v. t.
An aid-de-camp, so called by abbreviation; as, a general's aid.
n. sing. & pl.
An alley where there are stables; a narrow passage; a confined place.
n.
A circular letter, written or printed for the purpose of disseminating news. This was the name given to the earliest English newspapers.
conj.
If; though. See An, conj.
adv.
Of each; an equal quantity; as, wine and honey, ana (or, contracted, aa), / ij., that is, of wine and honey, each, two ounces.
n.
A black bird of tropical America, the West Indies and Florida (Crotophaga ani), allied to the cuckoos, and remarkable for communistic nesting.
conj.
A particle which expresses the relation of connection or addition. It is used to conjoin a word with a word, a clause with a clause, or a sentence with a sentence.
n.
One who gathered news for, and wrote, news-letters.
a. & adv.
Applied to breeding from a male and female of the same parentage. See under Breeding.
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