What is the meaning of CHARLES. Phrases containing CHARLES
See meanings and uses of CHARLES!Slangs & AI meanings
Ears. Used as "I'll batt yer lugs for yer!", or "Christ that Prince Charles has a huge pair of lugs on 'im!!".
Penis.
exclamation used to convey disgust or disagreement - Charles Dicken's Scrooge was infamous for his "Bah humbug"
Particularly nasty boys at my school in Charleston, West Virginia are always going around calling girls winches, A winch is ugly, stupid, bitchy, person who has enough guts to stand up to any boys when they're bugging her. This is not a cuss. (ed: added verbatim)
Charles Dance is London Cockney rhyming slang for chance.
A code word for homosexuality used by Charles Skinner Matthews a friend of Lord Byron.
Charles James Fox is London Cockney rhyming slang for a thetrical box.
Box
Someone with excessively large or protruding ears (e.g. Prince Charles).
, (stond) v. past participle., High on drugs. [Etym., Ray Charles “Let’s go get stoned.â€]
Drain Charles Dickens is slang for to masturbate.
Charles is British slang for cocaine.
exclamation used to convey disgust or disagreement - Charles Dicken's Scrooge was infamous for his "Bah humbug"
For person with protuding ears - like Prince Charles?
Charles Atlas is derogatory British slang for a puny man.
Vietcong--short for the phonetic representation Victor Charlie. Pg. 506
A marriage of convenience, male and female marriage usually pair men who like men with ladies who like ladies, they marry for mutual benefit. [Charles Laughton the gay star had a Lavender marriage with actress Elsa Lanchester in 1929, Charles had his male lovers and Elsa had her men lovers too.]
Exclamation of surprise or disappointment f. contraction of "smegma" (a white secretion of the sebaceous glands of the foreskin). Current useage encouraged by "Lister" (Craig Charles) from the T.V series Red Dwarf who used it and the associated expression "You smeg-head!", and used in many a playground since. Often used insted of the word "fuck" when teachers were around. Also used as substitute for minging, i.e. unclean.
CHARLES
Slangs & AI derived meanings
Back In Five
Drum and fife is British military rhyming slang for a knife. Drum and fife is London Cockney rhyming slang for wife.
Skink is derogatory Black British slang for a white person.
Derisive term for a student brakeman standing on a boxcar with his lamp out and a cinder in his eye
Stash is slang for to hide. Stash is slang for illicit drugs.
It is an often stereotype that most people who collect unemployment are black. And blacks pretend they are injured so they can collect.
In a ceremonial display, all hands appear in a line on deck or aloft and grasp the guardrails. Originally, in the days of sail, the crew grasped the rigging. The reasoning behind this tradition was to show that guns were not manned and no small arms were carried. In the USN is it referred to as "Manning the Rails".
Mutual rubbing of lotion as a prelude to sexual advance, to "break the ice." The allusion is to the way monkeys and apes will offer to groom one another on first meeting, to allay mutual fear of approaching a stranger.
BETWEEN THE JIGS AND THE REELS
Between the jigs and the reels is Irish slang for between one thing and another.
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n.
A band or company of an organized military force instituted by James I. and dissolved by Charles II.; -- afterwards applied to the London militia.
n.
The constellation Charles's Wain, or Ursa Major. See Ursa major, under Ursa.
n.
Same as Charles's Wain.
n.
An adherent of a king (as of Charles I. in England, or of the Bourbons in france); one attached to monarchical government.
n.
A hybrid rose produced in 1817, by a French gardener, Noisette, of Charleston, South Carolina, from the China rose and the musk rose. It has given rise to many fine varieties, as the Lamarque, the Marechal (or Marshal) Niel, and the Cloth of gold. Most roses of this class have clustered flowers and are of vigorous growth.
n.
One who adhered to the Parliament, in opposition to King Charles I.
n.
Space of time between any two points or events; as, the interval between the death of Charles I. of England, and the accession of Charles II.
n.
One of a political party which grew up in England in the seventeenth century, in the reigns of Charles I. and II., when great contests existed respecting the royal prerogatives and the rights of the people. Those who supported the king in his high claims were called Tories, and the advocates of popular rights, of parliamentary power over the crown, and of toleration to Dissenters, were, after 1679, called Whigs. The terms Liberal and Radical have now generally superseded Whig in English politics. See the note under Tory.
v.
One who protests; -- originally applied to those who adhered to Luther, and protested against, or made a solemn declaration of dissent from, a decree of the Emperor Charles V. and the Diet of Spires, in 1529, against the Reformers, and appealed to a general council; -- now used in a popular sense to designate any Christian who does not belong to the Roman Catholic or the Greek Church.
n.
The Dipper, or Charles's Wain.
n.
A name given to each of three compromises made by the emperor Charles V. of Germany for the sake of harmonizing the connecting opinions of Protestants and Catholics.
n.
One of the adherents of Charles L. or Charles LL.; -- so called by the opposite party.
n.
One who kills or who murders a king; specifically (Eng.Hist.), one of the judges who condemned Charles I. to death.
n.
One of the court party in the time of king Charles I. as contrasted with a Roundhead or an adherent of Parliament.
n.
One of a sect of Christians, the outgrowth of a small association called the "Holy Club," formed at Oxford University, A.D. 1729, of which the most conspicuous members were John Wesley and his brother Charles; -- originally so called from the methodical strictness of members of the club in all religious duties.
a.
Of or pertaining to the party of King Charles I.
n.
A member of the Church of England, in the time of Charles II., who adopted more liberal notions in respect to the authority, government, and doctrines of the church than generally prevailed.
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