What is the meaning of KAK WHEEL. Phrases containing KAK WHEEL
See meanings and uses of KAK WHEEL!Slangs & AI meanings
Old oak is British rhyming slang for London (the Smoke).
Noun. 1. Rubbish, nonsense. 2. Excrement. * Also 'kak'.
In a game of pool, if a player wins without the other player having sunk any, the loser has to dak himself and do a lap of the table.
Kay is slang for ketamine.
Noun. 1. Rubbish, nonsense. 2. Excrement. * Cf. 'cack'.
Excrement, e.g. "cack face" Also "He got kakked on for shouting in the passage.",Variations are very common all over the world. Raises difficult questions of whether words used from another language count as slang. For example, this is a direct mutated transposition from the Afrikaans "kak" for "shit" - which of course raises the question of the origin of the colour 'khaki'!
AK 47 gas-operated assault rifle.
Kack is Black−American slang for fellow or dude.
Used in insignia as a tribute to the days when ships were built of oak.
AK 47 gas-operated assault rifle.
Oak is British slang for joke.
Ash and oak is London Cockney rhyming slang for cigarette (smoke).
Gospel oak is old London Cockney rhyming slang for a joke.
Yak is slang for noisy, stupid and incessant talking. Yak is slang for a laugh or joke.Yak is American slang for to vomit
(ed: entered verbatim - thanks Brian)) One that I heard not long ago - and that I used as a kid - in Loughborough, Leicestershire is to 'yak' a stone meaning to throw. it comes from the latin Iacio to throw. I was surprised to hear it used because only kids say it and it must have come down the ages since the Romans were here.
Zak is South African slang for money.
Oak and ash is British theatre rhyming slang for cash.
carried on a thick string around an RTOs neck to encrypt map coordinates.
To dak someone is to pull their keks down. You'd sneak up behind someone (especially if they were facing a bunch of girls), grab the sides of their pants and rip 'em down. They couldn't chase you without pulling their pants back up of course - the best was when someone forgot and they ended up flat in the dirt as well as with their shreddies on show.
Hearts of oak is London Cockney rhyming slang for without money (broke).
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n.
The yak.
n.
Any tree or shrub of the genus Quercus. The oaks have alternate leaves, often variously lobed, and staminate flowers in catkins. The fruit is a smooth nut, called an acorn, which is more or less inclosed in a scaly involucre called the cup or cupule. There are now recognized about three hundred species, of which nearly fifty occur in the United States, the rest in Europe, Asia, and the other parts of North America, a very few barely reaching the northern parts of South America and Africa. Many of the oaks form forest trees of grand proportions and live many centuries. The wood is usually hard and tough, and provided with conspicuous medullary rays, forming the silver grain.
n.
A young oak.
n.
see Ils Jack.
n.
The yellow inner bark of the Quercus tinctoria, the American black oak, yellow oak, dyer's oak, or quercitron oak, a large forest tree growing from Maine to eastern Texas.
n.
A genus of trees constituted by the oak. See Oak.
n.
Oak.
v. i. & n.
See Caw.
n.
A bovine mammal (Poephagus grunnies) native of the high plains of Central Asia. Its neck, the outer side of its legs, and its flanks, are covered with long, flowing, fine hair. Its tail is long and bushy, often white, and is valued as an ornament and for other purposes in India and China. There are several domesticated varieties, some of which lack the mane and the long hair on the flanks. Called also chauri gua, grunting cow, grunting ox, sarlac, sarlik, and sarluc.
n.
A species of oak (Quercus cerris) native in the Orient and southern Europe; -- called also bitter oak and Turkey oak.
n.
See Khan.
n.
A New Zealand parrot of the genus Nestor, especially the brown parrot (Nestor meridionalis).
a.
Made of oak.
n.
An Arabian shrub Catha edulis) the leaves of which are used as tea by the Arabs.
n.
Post; mail; also, the mail or postal arrangements; -- spelt also dawk, and dauk.
n.
The strong wood or timber of the oak.
n.
See Dak.
n.
Crooked; awry.
v. t.
To know; to ken.
n.
Resembling oak; strong.
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