What is the meaning of SMELT. Phrases containing SMELT
See meanings and uses of SMELT!Slangs & AI meanings
A response rhyme to a claim that someone had farted, guffed, released an SBD etc. and subsequently smelled. The person who remarked on the odour was greeted with the put down "Whoever smelt it dealt it" After a while, a rhyme was composed to counter act the effect of the slur with the retort "Whoever said the rhyme, did the crime!" thus transfering culpability back to the original person.
silent violent, silent but deadly, SBD
silent violent, silent but deadly, SBD
The silent farts that are always the most smelly. Used to decribe a lush anal aroma when no aural experience was encountered. Normally associated with "He who smelt (smelled) it dealt" and "He who denied it supplied it". Another rhyme used after someone said 'the one who smelt it dealt it' was the secret farter to quickly retort 'the one who did the rhyme did the crime', and would bask in the joy of having 'won' the debate over the identity of the emitter, oblivious to the tautologically incriminating nature of the statement.
A term of abuse to describe a person from a poor family you know, Tesco trainers, Oxfam clothes, smelt bad and always, always seemed to eat egg sndwiches which added to the general bad aroma!
Phrase used to place accusation upon someone who has announced that they've detected ass-gas in the air, i.e. someone farted. Upon accusation, the victim could retort with 'S/he who supplied it, denied it'. Another response was "The one who said the rhyme committed the crime"!
Someone who smelt like a tramp and looked filthy.
(ed: entered verbatim - can't improve on this) Browsing through your dictionary I saw "Stig" which reminded me of the word "Steg" which is probably a Merseyside variant. Could be elongated to Stegasaurus for comedic and strengthened effect, drawing more attention to the old-fashioned and un-with-it nature of the individual in question. Other words that were common currency in our north wirral school were Begsy (same as "Meff") , and "Biscuit". Biscuit referred not to the apocryphal public school boy jape, but to those pupils in the remedial class. Sometimes shortened to "Bikkies", they were so-called as one girl once remarked that they collectively smelt like the inside of a biscuit tin. I think it was custard creams actually.
SMELT
Slangs & AI derived meanings
Phrs. Insane, crazy. {Informal}
Heroin
At the contributors Lincolnshire secondary school, they called Wasp Shits, Wad Bombs (pronounced Wod-Bombs). Wadbombs were almost always fired with a 6 inch ruler (never 12 inch), or sometimes with the barrel of a biro. Often coloured, wadbombs would be used on white ceilings for maximum effect, and often paper was substituted for a chewed Bubbaloo sweet. One particular wad bomb remained on the physics room ceiling for at least seven years. Often, games revolved around attempting to fire wad bombs at a model human body (maximum points gained if the head was struck), trying to create the loudest sound by flicking a massive, sopping wet wadbomb on the ceiling during a quiet part of the lesson, all-out wadbomb wars involving firing wadbombs at point-blank range at someones face, and most dangerous off all, attempting to fire small wadbombs right in front of the teacher's face as they wrote on the blackboard, with their backs us. Only one boy succeeded, and was praised for the rest of his school career, for superb aim, technique, and above all, balls.
So Coked Up I Can Hardly Type
Car-retarding system used in some railroad yards
Little Kid In The Room
a drug addict; a person obsessed with something
it means thank you
  Cunning, false.
One of two highly-technical Olympic weightlifting events, this explosive two-stage movement begins by "cleaning" the weight from the floor to shoulders, and then "jerking" it overhead with a mighty push from the legs.
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n.
A workman's name for the graphite which forms incidentally in iron smelting.
n.
The European smelt (Osmerus eperlanus).
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Smelt
n.
The art of working metals, comprehending the whole process of separating them from other matters in the ore, smelting, refining, and parting them; sometimes, in a narrower sense, only the process of extracting metals from their ores.
n.
A house or place for smelting.
n.
The button, globule, or mass of metal, in a more or less impure state, which forms in the bottom of the crucible in smelting and reduction of ores.
imp. & p. p.
of Smelt
n.
A mass of iron on which the operation of smelting has failed of its intended effect; -- so called from Shadrach, one of the three Hebrews who came forth unharmed from the fiery furnace of Nebuchadnezzar. (See Dan. iii. 26, 27.)
n.
Any one of numerous species of small silvery salmonoid fishes of the genus Osmerus and allied genera, which ascend rivers to spawn, and sometimes become landlocked in lakes. They are esteemed as food, and have a peculiar odor and taste.
n.
Any one of several species of small fishes of the family Atherinidae, having a silvery stripe along each side of the body. The common species of the American coast (Menidia notata) is very abundant. Called also silverside, sand smelt, friar, tailor, and tinker.
n.
A fish, the bib.
n.
One who, or that which, smelts.
n.
A smelt; a sparling.
v. i.
To melt or fuse, as, ore, for the purpose of separating and refining the metal; hence, to reduce; to refine; to flux or scorify; as, to smelt tin.
n.
A gull; a simpleton.
n.
A spongy, semivitrifled substance which miners or smelters mix with the ores of metals to prevent their fusion.
n.
A yellow or brown amorphous substance obtained as a sublimation product in the flues of smelting furnaces of zinc, and consisting of a crude zinc oxide.
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