What is the meaning of FLED. Phrases containing FLED
See meanings and uses of FLED!Slangs & AI meanings
Emigrant family with its household goods and farm equipment traveling by rail; sometimes included even livestock crowded into the same boxcar. Zulu can mean only the car, or the car and all its contents. This ethod of travel was not uncommon in homesteading days on Western prairies. Origin of term is obscure. May have some connection with the fact that British homesteaders in Africa fled in overfilled farm wagons before Zulu marauders
FLED
Slangs & AI derived meanings
Cool; That club was gnarly.
(KIN-dur bat) n., A person new to the Goth scene, a partial Goth. “I’m seeing a lot of new Kinder Bats at the Rocky Horror Picture Show.â€Â [Etym., 90’s youth, from German kinder, child; child-bat] see Goth
Crack Cocaine
money. Pronunciation emphasises the long 'doo' sound. Various other spellings, e.g., spondulacks, spondulics. Normally refers to notes and a reasonable amount of spending money. The spondulicks slang can be traced back to the mid-1800s in England (source: Cassells), but is almost certainly much older. Spondoolicks is possibly from Greek, according to Cassells - from spondulox, a type of shell used for early money. Cassells also suggests possible connection with 'spondylo-' referring to spine or vertebrae, based on the similarity between a stack of coins and a spine, which is referenced in etymologist Michael Quinion's corespondence with a Doug Wilson, which cites the reference to piled coins (and thereby perhaps the link to sponylo/spine) thus: "Spondulics - coin piled for counting..." from the 1867 book A Manual of the Art of Prose Composition: For the Use of Colleges and Schools, by John Mitchell Bonnell. (Thanks R Maguire for prompting more detail for this one.)
Take Care Cause I Care
rohypnol
Commercial activity carried out over the Internet.
Noun. The female genitals, inclusive of pubic hair.
Short−house is British slang for a short person.
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imp. & p. p.
of Fledge
v. t. & i.
To furnish with feathers; to supply with the feathers necessary for flight.
v. t. & i.
To furnish or adorn with any soft covering.
a.
A sudden, overpowering fright; esp., a sudden and groundless fright; terror inspired by a trifling cause or a misapprehension of danger; as, the troops were seized with a panic; they fled in a panic.
a.
Unfledged, or newly fledged.
n.
Powdered fledspar, kaolin, or quartz, used in the manufacture of porcelain.
a.
To put for safe keeping in the interior of a place or country; to confine to one locality; as, to intern troops which have fled for refuge to a neutral country.
a.
Not fledged; not feathered; hence, not fully developed; immature.
v. i.
To become fledged; to fledge.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Fledge
n.
A young chicken before it is fully fledged.
n.
A neatling of a pigeon or other similar bird, esp. when very fat and not fully fledged.
imp. & p. p.
of Flee
n.
A seat in churches near the altar, to which offenders formerly fled for sanctuary.
n.
A large, extinct bird (Didus ineptus), formerly inhabiting the Island of Mauritius. It had short, half-fledged wings, like those of the ostrich, and a short neck and legs; -- called also dronte. It was related to the pigeons.
n.
A young bird just fledged.
a.
Fledged; fledge.
v. i.
Feathered; furnished with feathers or wings; able to fly.
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