What is the meaning of MONSTER. Phrases containing MONSTER
See meanings and uses of MONSTER!Slangs & AI meanings
Someone who prefers to give oral sex than have sex by more traditional methods.
One who has a violent reaction to methamphetamine
Green monster is surfing slang for a huge wave.
Noun. Signifying the best or most outstanding, when used suffixally. E.g."He's can out drink anyone, he's a real beer monster."
Heavy crack smokers
Someone who logs more hours asleep (in their rack) than awake.
Crack smoker
cocaine
crack smoker
From the monster movie "C.H.U.D.", starring primitive dark creatures that lived in sewers
A sailor that spends a lot of time in his pit (bunk).
Kids or siblings [before Lady Gaga] (courtesy of Jim Hip)
P.M.S. monster is American teen slang for a menstruating woman.
person who has a violent reaction to methamphetamine
Cocaine
Rack monster is slang for someone who sleeps a lot.
Crack smoker
heavy crack smokers
The mad man rumoured to live in the woods by the woggy.
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n.
A production out of ordinary course of nature; an abnormal development; a monster.
n.
A sea monster of the whale kind.
a.
Frightful, shocking, or offensive to the eyes; dreadful to behold; as, a hideous monster; hideous looks.
a.
Resembling a monster; abnormal; of a pathological growth, exceedingly complex or highly organized.
a.
Abounding in monsters.
n.
A monster; a false conception; a mass of fleshy matter, generated in the uterus.
n.
A fabulous sea monster.
n.
An imaginary monster, or hideous giant of fairy tales, who lived on human beings; hence, any frightful giant; a cruel monster.
v. t.
To make monstrous.
n.
The state of being monstrous, or out of the common order of nature; that which is monstrous; a monster.
n.
A dangerous rock on the Italian coast opposite the whirpool Charybdis on the coast of Sicily, -- both personified in classical literature as ravenous monsters. The passage between them was formerly considered perilous; hence, the saying "Between Scylla and Charybdis," signifying a great peril on either hand.
n.
A fabulous monster, with the head and fore quarters of a horse joined to the tail of a dolphin or other fish (Hippocampus brevirostris), -- seen in Pompeian paintings, attached to the chariot of Neptune.
n.
The formation of monsters.
n.
A monster capable of assuming a woman's form, who was said to devour human beings or suck their blood; a vampire; a sorceress; a witch.
n.
A fabulous Scandinavian sea monster, often represented as resembling an island, but sometimes as resembling an immense octopus.
n.
A serpent or monster in the lake or marsh of Lerna, in the Peloponnesus, represented as having many heads, one of which, when cut off, was immediately succeeded by two others, unless the wound was cauterized. It was slain by Hercules. Hence, a terrible monster.
n.
On Greek art and mythology, a she-monster, usually represented as having the winged body of a lion, and the face and breast of a young woman.
a.
Having the qualities of a monster; deviating greatly from the natural form or character; abnormal; as, a monstrous birth.
n.
The god of the waters; the Indian Neptune. He is regarded as regent of the west, and lord of punishment, and is represented as riding on a sea monster, holding in his hand a snaky cord or noose with which to bind offenders, under water.
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