What is the meaning of QUEUE UP. Phrases containing QUEUE UP
See meanings and uses of QUEUE UP!Slangs & AI meanings
n a school-child who, having done particularly well academically or on the sports field, is allowed to perform such glorious tasks as making sure everyone behaves properly in the lunch queue, tidying up after school events and showing new pupils around at the weekends. As you may have guessed, I was never a prefect. Bitter? Me?
A column of people. See also Wait in a queue
Getting into a queue at the front instead of at the back, primarily because you were older than the rest of the people in the queue and/or you knew the prefect at the front was called 'swicking the queue' prompting cries of "Hey min, get back ye swick!", ' from brave people, or chanting 'swicker' if you weren't going to get away with it.
To 'barge', i.e. to deliberately run into someone. To 'dunsh into somebody' was to 'barge into' them. You could 'dunsh in' the dinner queue, which was the same as 'chorin in'. Contributor said he only found out that 'dunsh' wasn't standard English when he reached his 20's!
Basically it meant a minature riot. Usual location for these was in school corridors. Situation arose when crownds of children tried to pass each other when there too little room to do so easily. Usual times for a rammy to occur was between classes and occasionally when people tried to skip the lunch queue.
Letting a person into a queue ahead of you.
n, v, pron. “cue” line. This doesn’t really help the definition at all, as a line could be any number of things. A pencil line? A railway line? A line of Charlie? A line dancer? As a result of this potentially dangerous confusion, a word was developed by some British word-scientists to separate this particular line from all the others. A queue is a line of people. To queue is to be one of those queuing in the queue. The word means “tail” in French, and is used in the same context. Americans do in fact use the word, but only in the “you’re third in the queue” type telephone call waiting systems.
When I'm standing patiently in the checkout queue at Tesco I like to chivvy along the old ladies in front of me. If only they would stop fannying around and hurry up!
Pot of glue is London Cockney rhyming slang for a Jew. Pot of glue is London Cockney rhyming slang for a queue.
To line up in an orderly fashion
Not In My Queue
Give cuts is American slang for to allow someone to go in front of you in a queue.
Stand in line. See also Queue
Telling someone to go all the way to the front of a queue (which the other people in the queue generally won't allow).
When I'm standing patiently in the checkout queue at Tesco I like to chivvy along the old ladies in front of me. If only they would stop fannying around and hurry up!
Letting a person into a queue behind you.
Homosexual.
Telling someone to go all the way to the back of the queue. c.f. backage, frontage chinese backage.
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v. t.
To wind up.
v. t. & i.
To rise upward in a whirl; to raise upward with a whirling motion.
v. t.
To turn up; to direct upward; to throw up; as, to upturn the ground in plowing.
v. t.
To train up; to educate.
n.
The tail; the end of a thing; especially, a tail-like twist of hair worn at the back of the head; a queue.
a.
Directed toward a higher place; as, with upward eye; with upward course.
v. t.
To fasten, as hair, in a queue.
n.
A line of persons waiting anywhere.
n.
The upper part; the top.
v. t.
To waft upward.
v. i.
To rise with a curling motion; to curl upward, as smoke.
v. t.
To trace up or out.
n.
A cue, or queue.
adv.
Alt. of Upwards
v. t. & i.
To please.
adv.
In the upper parts; above.
n.
A tail-like appendage of hair; a pigtail.
adv.
In a direction from lower to higher; toward a higher place; in a course toward the source or origin; -- opposed to downward; as, to tend or roll upward.
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