What is the meaning of GOTTEN. Phrases containing GOTTEN
See meanings and uses of GOTTEN!Slangs & AI meanings
Noun. Money or items, as taken by a thief or burglar, ill-gotten gains. {Informal}Adj. Not very good, terrible, worthless, cheap or of poor quality.
The act of doing pullups/chinups by jerking your body, or in other words, using momentum. Looked down upon by lifters but in gymnastics, the explosive kipping pullup is useful. It’s gotten a bad rep due to CultFitters claiming it to be the end-all, be-all (see below.)
Ill-gotten gains, stolen money
(n.) A term used to describe a playable character. Usage is not popular with FFXI/XIV veterans because of the emotional attachments some have gotten with their characters, and the lack of characters having a "Cartoon" like appearance that some MMO's have used. Some animosity has been shown towards users from other MMO's using it in FFXI/XIV. Use "Char" instead.
A ride, one gotten by hitchhiking.
Early. 'e's never gotten here liz
n. space between the tires and the ground. (Both tires must be off the ground or it isn't "air".) Said to be caught or gotten. See sky.
A source magazine slang for a Rapper who is good but has not gotten a record deal yet.
1. An interjection shouted at someone who has been publicly humiliated. 1a. "Moted, corroded, your booty exploded." 2. Adjective describing such a person, i.e. "When she said that to him, he musta felt so moted." 3. General insult, i.e. "Those shoes are hella moted.". Contributor reports this as being very regional in its use. He doesn't think it's been heard outside the California state border. Even in CA it seems to have been confined to certain neighborhoods, with huge tracts of land between them totally ignorant of the word, as if it had teleported the distance. He thought it was a San Francisco Bay Area thing, but recently heard it referred to as "Valley slang" (S. California.) He remembers it from the early 90s, but its use apparently peaked in the 80s. Probably derives from "demoted." (ed: no sooner do we add information than it's updated... which is great! For example... see below. Ilana sent in the following) Your listing says it was particular to California, but you only list the Bay area (San Francisco) and the San Fernando Valley as places where you've gotten confirmed reports it was used. Well, I can add another area: I lived in Santa Monica (L.A.) in the 1970s and heard "moted" and "moted and corroded" all the time, at school. Although Santa Monica is only a handful of miles from the San Fernando Valley, it is definitely NOT the valley, culturally speaking; those really are two distinct areas, so you could add Santa Monica to your listing as a legitimate third part of California where the expression was used. (ed: so that clears *that* up... perhaps?)
Special past participle of got, similar to the American 'gotten', as in 'Aa've getten a new pair of biots?' or 'Me mam's getten a new car!.
money. There are many different interpretations of boodle meaning money, in the UK and the US. Boodle normally referred to ill-gotten gains, such as counterfeit notes or the proceeds of a robbery, and also to a roll of banknotes, although in recent times the usage has extended to all sorts of money, usually in fairly large amounts. Much variation in meaning is found in the US. The origins of boodle meaning money are (according to Cassells) probably from the Dutch word 'boedel' for personal effects or property (a person's worth) and/or from the old Scottish 'bodle' coin, worth two Scottish pence and one-sixth of an English penny, which logically would have been pre-decimalisation currency.
Used for saying "Hello" or "What's up?" wassup, b? What's up brother, brotha, bro, b- used as in informal greeting amongst friends. The term 'wasabie' as previously entred was mistaken for 'wassup, b?' ie what's up, brother- bro- b; that was popularised by the Budweiser beer commercials here in the US in which the characters greet each other with the phrase: 'waaassssssuuuuuuuup!!!!' back and forth on phones/intercoms. In one of the commercials, one of the characters is having dinner with his girl at a Japanese restaurant. They are brought their meals which included wasabi. The character chuckles when the japanese waiter says wasabi. So he says wassup, b. The waiter says wasabi and the back and forth and next thing you know, he has gotten every waiter/staff yelling wasssssuuuup, b/wasssssaaaaaabi!!!! Order is then restored when his girlfriend slaps her hand on the table. They are now classic commercials. There were a couple of independent take offs on these commercials that used old grannies, the "Superfriends" cartoons, and New York Jewish businessmen and Rabbis where 'wassup' was changed to "shalom" and the product was "whitefish" instead of Budweiser. Budweiser also came out with other incarnations where Yuppies drinking imports were used and one with a mafia flavour where the greeting went from wassup to "how ya doin" with heavy NYC accent. The Bud commercials can be see on the net at www.adcritic.com and the Shalom spoof was on www.neurotrash.com. (ed: and I just thought wasabi was a really hot Japanese dressing!) On this point, we received the following: Your online slang dictionary contains an entry for "Wasabi" and lists it as meaning "hello". It also properly mentions that Wasabi is a hot horseradish sauce. I believe that the usage of Wasabi as "Hello" comes from a series of American Budweiser Beer TV commercials It started with a group of men sitting around answering the phone yelling "WAAAAAAAZAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA" which is a wide open mouthed tongue sticking out way of saying "What's up". In the next commercial, one of the guys from the first one is out with his girlfriend at a sushi restaurant. The waiter brings them their wasabi sauce with their sushi, and the guy starts playing with the word, similar to the "Waaaaaazaaaaaaaaaaaa" from the first commencial. "Wasabi" (chuckle) "Wasaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaabi" Eventually everyone in the restaurant is yelling "Wasaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaabi" before the guys girlfriend scolds him and they all stop. So, "Wasabi" = "wazaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa" = "What's up" (ed: which seems to sum that up pretty effectively - I think!)
A source magazine slang for a Rapper who is good but has not gotten a record deal yet.
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Slangs & AI derived meanings
This is an expression that means to wreck something.
Pail is Black−American slang for the stomach.
assessment of the 'fear factor,' as in the difficulty/risk in an upcoming mission.
Older man who shows affection for his younger male lover with gifts.
Medical inspection of the male genitals, for venereal diseases.
Verb. 1. To go for it, in the sense of not holding back. E.g."We were having it last night, it was fantastic, but I can't remember a bloody thing after 3am." 2. An exclamation of encouragement, to a friend or colleague, to put everything into it. E.g."Go on my friend, have it!"
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Bugged is slang for angry, irritated.Bugged is slang for suffering from abscesses.
Indian word for the color black. Used by Indians as a slur for black people.
Crack is slang for a joke.Crack is slang for a processed form of cocaine hydrochloride used as a stimulant. Crack is slang for toshare.Crack is slang for split.Crack is British slang for first−rate.Crack is British slang for the anus.Crack is British slang for to break into.Crack is Irish slang for a good time.Crack is old British slang for the vagina.Crack was th century British slang for a prostitute.
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a.
Unjustly gotten.
a.
Not gotten; not acquired.
n.
Things gotten by a man's own industry, or purchased with his own money, as opposed to things which come to him by descent.
n.
Money; riches; lucre; gain; -- generally conveying the idea of something ill-gotten or worthless. It has no plural.
v. t.
To give up unwillingly as what one has wrongfully seized and appropriated; to make restitution of; to surrender; as, he was compelled to disgorge his ill-gotten gains.
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