What is the meaning of UNDERGROUND. Phrases containing UNDERGROUND
See meanings and uses of UNDERGROUND!Slangs & AI meanings
n subway (specifically underground railway): ThereÂ’s an underground station two minutes from my house.
Car. This is an example of the polari underground gay language.
K, super K, special K, Vitamin K
ketamine, an anesthetic similar in structure to PCP . First synthesized by a pharmaceutical company in the early 1960s, powdered ketamine emerged as a recreational drug in the 1970s. It became Vitamin K in the underground club scene in the 1980s and Special K in the 1990s rave scene.
Chief engineer
Sexual intercourse, more underground kinda talk
To walk along. This is an example of the polari underground gay language used in the British Merchant Marine.
Underground is slang for belonging to an 'alternative' society, counterculture, resistance group, or criminal organisation.
Child. This is an example of the polari underground gay language used in the British Merchant Marine.
n. Socially conscious brother or sister; underground ‘non mainstream rap’ "Don’t bring no Lil’ Wayne to Justin’s house that fool too backpack; he ain’t tryin’ ta hear it!"Â
n underground pedestrian walkway. Built to enable you to cross the road safely, urinate or inject heroin. Brits do not call the London underground train system the “subway.” They call it the “underground.”
Good. This is an example of the polari underground gay language.
n the London Underground railway. Londoners are clearly not as inspired as Glaswegians, who call theirs the “Clockwork Orange.” In the U.S., these sorts of rail systems are known as “subways” which, no doubt in order to cause confusion, is what the Brits call the walkways which go underneath roads, where tramps live and drunk people urinate.
an all-night underground party, usually frequented by teens and college students. Raves are characterized by techno music and often designer drugs, especially Ecstasy.
, (strapt) v. past participle. Carrying a weapon.  “When Shaft went underground, he was always strapped.â€Â [Etym., African American]
Hair. This is an example of the polari underground gay language used in the British Merchant Marine.
v disembark. Many American tourists are confronted with this word quite rapidly after reaching the U.K., because on the London Underground the pre-recorded message says such things as: “This is Baker Street. Alight here for Madame Tussauds.” Madame Tussauds is a cheesy attraction and best avoided. The voice on the tube only says the part about the alighting.
(1) male ejaculate (2) courage (3) an attractive male (4) worthless individual, eg; "Now listen here, spunk!" (ed: it's odd how the word has opposite meanings in UK and AUS, i.e. Aussie girls LIKE their men to be "spunks")From Scottish Gaelic "spong", tinder, pith, sponge, and Middle Irish "spongc", tinder. Both related to Latin "spongia", sponge. The link to sponge is that wood used for kindling was spongy in appearance. More below. Used in 1536 as "sponk" to mean "a spark". The figurative use of "spunk" meaning "courage, pluck" comes from the late 18th century. It was not slang for semen until the late 19th century. In 1811, it was still defined in a dictionary of cant and underground slang as "rotten touchwood, or a kind of fungus prepared for tinder; figuratively spirit, courage". I surmise that the link to semen was because the ejaculate leaps out like sparks, indicating a virile chap, and virile isn't far from courageous, having mettle, spirited. Meanwhile, it's correct that Australian girls refer to sexy young men as spunks. That makes me smile - if only they knew what they really meant! (ed: thanks for that overkill Brian
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n.
The underground portion of a plant, whether a true root or a tuber, a bulb or rootstock, as in the potato, the onion, or the sweet flag.
n.
A species of pea (Amphicarpaea monoica). It is a climbing leguminous plant, with hairy underground pods.
n.
A small wagon used for the underground work of a mine.
n.
A perennial underground stem, producing leafly s/ems or flower stems from year to year; a rhizome.
n.
A plow of peculiar construction, for forming underground drains.
n.
An underground drain or trench with openings through which the water may percolate from the soil or ground above.
n.
A miner's underground working time or shift.
v. t.
The buds or branches produced from underground stems.
n.
The place or space beneath the surface of the ground; subterranean space.
v. t.
To dig an underground ditches in, so as to drain the surface; to underdrain; as, to underditch a field or a farm.
n.
An underground way or gallery; especially, a passage under a street, in which water mains, gas mains, telegraph wires, etc., are conducted.
a.
Being below the surface of the ground; as, an underground story or apartment.
adv.
Beneath the surface of the earth.
n.
The wedging, as of a horse or car, against the top of an underground passage.
n.
An underground gallery excavated to intercept and destroy the mining of an enemy.
n.
A passage underground through which ore is shot.
a.
Done or occurring out of sight; secret.
n.
The power of producing two kinds of reproductive bodies, as in Amphicarpaea, in which besides the usual pods, there are others underground.
n.
The upper part of a lode, or the roof of a horizontal underground passage.
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