What is the meaning of PINCHE. Phrases containing PINCHE
See meanings and uses of PINCHE!Slangs & AI meanings
Test of hardness which involved another person pinching the back of your hand at a specified percentage. The hundred was the ultimate, which was precisely as hard as the pincher could manage. The level of pain inflicted depended on the strength of the pincher and their fingernails; flesh removal was not uncommon.
Verb. 1. To steal. E.g."Guess who's just lost his job for pinching from work again?" 2. To arrest. E.g."He got pinched when he was climbing out of the kitchen window with the stolen TV."
A string of small explosive firewords created by packing a small amount of gunpowder into a long tube of brown paper along with a thin fuse. The paper is then "pinched" and folded such that it looks something like a series of attached z's. The effect is that when the fuse is lit the first part explodes sending the firework in an unpredictable direction. The fuse continues to burn exploding each section of the firework in turn. Throwing a lit jacky- jumper into a crowd of kids was always good for a laugh... unless they (or an adult) caught you.
, (PEEN-chay) adj., damned, goddamned, “I can’t get this pinche ride to start.â€Â [Etym., Chicano/Spanish]
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a.
Hungry; pinched for food.
a.
Pinched or weakened by hunger.
n.
One who, or that which, pinches.
n.
The European blue titmouse.
a.
Attenuated, as with fasting or suffering; lean; meager; pinched and grim.
imp. & p. p.
of Pinch
a.
Narrow; destitute; pinching; pinched; as, necessitous circumstances.
v. t.
Figuratively: To cramp; to straiten; to oppress; to starve; to distress; as, to be pinched for money.
n.
The quality or condition of being strait; especially, a pinched condition or situation caused by poverty; as, the straitnessof their circumstances.
n. pl.
A kind of small pinchers with long jaws, -- used for bending or cutting metal rods or wire, for handling small objects such as the parts of a watch, etc.
n.
Torture by pinching with forceps or pinchers.
n. pl.
Small pinchers used to pluck out hairs, and for other purposes.
n. pl.
An instrument having two handles and two grasping jaws working on a pivot; -- used for griping things to be held fast, drawing nails, etc.
n. pl.
Small pinchers for holding, breaking, or cutting.
n. pl.
See Pinchers.
n.
A locksmith's pinchers for grasping the point of a key in the keyhole, to open a door from the outside when the key is inside.
a.
Pinched with hunger; starved.
v. i.
To act with pressing force; to compress; to squeeze; as, the shoe pinches.
n.
Any one of several species of small, soft-furred South American monkeys belonging to Callithrix, Chrysothrix, and allied genera; as, the collared teetee (Callithrix torquatus), and the squirrel teetee (Chrysothrix sciurea). Called also pinche, titi, and saimiri. See Squirrel monkey, under Squirrel.
n.
Small pinchers for curling the hair.
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