What is the meaning of HELMET. Phrases containing HELMET
See meanings and uses of HELMET!Slangs & AI meanings
This was a term for a stormtrooper helmet.
v. to ride (or crash) through dense bushes, so leaves and branches are hanging from your bike and helmet. See prune.
Foul smelling individual with mentally subnormal tendencies often less well off financially than their tormentors. Derived from a special needs GCSE equivalency course which involved the hapless participants riding around the playground on rusted motorcycles with ludicrously big helmets often giving the rider's head an egg like appearance. Also jutter,jupveous and jup. Still often heard in drinking establishments.
n. helmet.
n. helmet.
Alternate name for a British Policeman's helmet. f. pointy shape with nipple like protruberance on top (Also used on The Young Ones TV show, c. 1983 when Neil joins the Force. "Come in Neil, take the tit off your head" (Warlock, episode "Cash").
Pronounced 'helmet heed'. Basically a type of haircut, often inflicted by your own mum, not straight round like a basin head, but shaped as it describes. Reminiscent of a helmet worn by German soldiers in WWII.
v. to use one's bike or helmet to remove leaves and branches from the surrounding flora. Usually unintentional.
n. a helmet featuring more vents than protective surface.
This was a slang term that referred to clone trooper helmets.
Contraction of 'subnormal'. Used because some of the Special Ed students at our Uni used to have to catch the bus around the corner wearing helmets.
Helmet is slang for the tip of the penis.
A hardhat or helmet. See "Brain Bucket".
A motorcycle helmet.
South Vietnamese police. The nickname came from their uniform white helmets and gloves. Pg. 523
A hardhat or helmet.
n. helmet.
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n.
A headpiece; a helmet.
n.
A helmet-shaped hat, made of cork, felt, metal, or other suitable material, worn as part of the uniform of soldiers, firemen, etc., also worn in hot countries as a protection from the heat of the sun.
v. t.
To deprive of the helm or helmet.
a.
Wearing a helmet; furnished with or having a helmet or helmet-shaped part; galeate.
a.
Not wearing a helmet; without a helmet.
n.
In ancient armor, a visor, or projection like the peak of a cap, to which a face guard was sometimes attached. This was sometimes fixed, and sometimes moved freely upon the helmet and could be raised like the beaver. Called also umber, and umbril.
n.
A light kind of helmet, with or without a visor, introduced during the 15th century.
n.
That which resembles a helmet in form, position, etc.
a.
Being under water, or beneath the surface of water; adapted for use under water; submarine; as, a subaqueous helmet.
n.
A part of a helmet, arranged so as to lift or open, and so show the face. The openings for seeing and breathing are generally in it.
n.
A helmet. See Sallet.
n.
That part of a helmet which is intended for the admission of air, -- sometimes in the visor.
n.
Any plant of the labiate genus Scutellaria, the calyx of whose flower appears, when inverted, like a helmet with the visor raised.
v. t.
To deprive of the helmet.
a.
Shaped like a helmet; galeate. See Illust. of Galeate.
n.
A helmeted Australian cockatoo (Calyptorhynchus funereus); -- called also funeral cockatoo.
n.
The representation of a helmet over shields or coats of arms, denoting gradations of rank by modifications of form.
a.
Divested or deprived of the helm or helmet.
n.
The hood-shaped upper petal of some flowers, as of monkshood; -- called also helmet.
p. p.
A piece of armor for the head; headpiece; helmet.
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