What is the meaning of PLASTERERS RADIO. Phrases containing PLASTERERS RADIO
See meanings and uses of PLASTERERS RADIO!Slangs & AI meanings
Intoxicated, drunk or plastered. See also Full as a boot
Drunk. The same as canned, corked, tanked, primed, scrooched, jazzed, zozzled, plastered, owled, embalmed, lit, potted, ossified or fried to the hat.
Contemptible, horrible, lousy. 2. Smashed, plastered, drunk
Drunk out of ones mind.
Adj. Drunk, intoxicated.
Yet another way to describe being drunk. Clearly we need a lot of ways to describe it since getting plastered is a national pastime.
Intoxicated, plastered, drunk
Another word for loaded. In other words you have had rather too much to drink down your local. It has nothing to do with being covered with plaster though anything is possible when you are plastered.
Plastered is slang for drunk, intoxicated.
- Another word for loaded. In other words you have had rather too much to drink down your local. It has nothing to do with being covered with plaster though anything is possible when you are plastered.
Adj. When likened to, meaning messy, disorderly, dirty, ugly. E.g."He had a face like a plasterer's radio. It was covered in spots."
A heavy drinking session or drinking party
adj Intoxicated; drunk.
Lord and mastered is London Cockney rhyming slang for drunk, intoxicated (plastered).
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n.
The art or practice of using the radiophone.
n.
One who makes plaster casts.
v. t.
To nail small strips of board or larger scantling upon, in order to make a level surface for lathing or boarding, or to provide for a space or interval back of the plastered or boarded surface, as inside an outer wall, by way of protection against damp.
n.
Any external topical application to the body, except ointments and plasters, as a poultice, lotion, etc.
n.
The first coat on laths of plasterer's two-coat work.
n.
A plasterer's float, having two handles; -- used in smoothing ceilings, etc.
n.
The concrete juice (gum resin) of an umbelliferous plant, the Dorema ammoniacum. It is brought chiefly from Persia in the form of yellowish tears, which occur singly, or are aggregated into masses. It has a peculiar smell, and a nauseous, sweet taste, followed by a bitter one. It is inflammable, partially soluble in water and in spirit of wine, and is used in medicine as an expectorant and resolvent, and for the formation of certain plasters.
n.
An implement shaped like a knife, flat, thin, and somewhat flexible, used for spreading paints, fine plasters, drugs in compounding prescriptions, etc. Cf. Palette knife, under Palette.
n.
A style of painting on plastered walls or stone, in which the colors are rendered permanent by sprinklings of water, in which is mixed a proportion of soluble glass (a silicate of soda).
a.
Whitewashed or plastered with lime.
n.
A gum resin gathered from certain Oriental species of Cistus. It has a pungent odor and is chiefly used in making plasters, and for fumigation.
n.
A plasterer.
n.
The act of softening by mixing with a thinner substance; the formation of ingredients into a mass for pills or plasters.
a.
Of or pertaining to the Radiolaria.
v. t.
To quit or leave entirely; to desert; to abandon; to depart or withdraw from; to leave; as, false friends and flatterers forsake us in adversity.
n.
One who applies plaster or mortar.
n.
One of the Radiolaria.
n.
A fragrant gum resin obtained chiefly from tropical trees of the genera Amyris and Canarium. A. elemifera yields Mexican elemi; C. commune, the Manila elemi. It is used in the manufacture of varnishes, also in ointments and plasters.
imp. & p. p.
of Plaster
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