What is the meaning of TUSSAH SILK. Phrases containing TUSSAH SILK
See meanings and uses of TUSSAH SILK!Slangs & AI meanings
Noun. An idiot, a contemptible person. Also, occasionally spelt tossa.
Bucks hussar was old London Cockney rhyming slang for a cigar.
This is another word for wanker and has exactly the same meaning and shares the same hand signal. Unfortunately my house in Texas was in Tossa Lane, which was a problem when telling older members of the family where to write to me!
Silk is American air−force slang for a parachute.
accentuates a word like wicked cool or wicked pissah (thanks again CharlieOFD)
 Handkerchief (often silk)
, as in “all silk so far†All okay so far
Mad cool yo
 A silk handkerchief
- This is another word for wanker and has exactly the same meaning and shares the same hand signal. Unfortunately my house in Texas was in Tossa Lane, which was a problem when telling older members of the family where to write to me!
Tush is American slang for the backside, buttocks.
tosheroon/tusheroon/tosh/tush/tusseroon
half-a-crown (2/6) from the mid-1900s, and rarely also slang for a crown (5/-), most likely based in some way on madza caroon ('lingua franca' from mezzo crown), perhaps because of the rhyming, or some lost cockney rhyming rationale.
Satin and silk is London Cockney rhyming slang for milk.
Heroin
Yellow silk is slang for oriental women viewed purely as sex partners.
Mostly in Massachusetts means great or awesome (courtesy of CharlieOFD)
n Buttocks.
Colloquial term for the education services nurse who came around once every six months to tussle your hair around looking for nits (head lice). From 'Nitty Nora the hair explorer', also Nitty Nora Bug Explorer.
A silk hat.
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n.
A tush of a horse.
n.
A struggle; a scuffle.
n.
Any plant of the genera Asclepias and Acerates whose seed vessels contain a long, silky down; milkweed.
n.
A European species of Saint John's-wort; the tutsan. See Tutsan.
a.
Of or pertaining to Tuscany in Italy; -- specifically designating one of the five orders of architecture recognized and described by the Italian writers of the 16th century, or characteristic of the order. The original of this order was not used by the Greeks, but by the Romans under the Empire. See Order, and Illust. of Capital.
n.
The larva of any one of numerous species of bombycid moths, which spins a large amount of strong silk in constructing its cocoon before changing to a pupa.
superl.
Hence, soft and smooth; as, silky wine.
superl.
Of or pertaining to silk; made of, or resembling, silk; silken; silklike; as, a silky luster.
interj.
An exclamation indicating check, rebuke, or contempt; as, tush, tush! do not speak of it.
n.
Originally, one of the national cavalry of Hungary and Croatia; now, one of the light cavalry of European armies.
n.
A variety of pyroxene, from the Mussa Alp in Piedmont; diopside.
n.
A native or inhabitant of Tuscany.
n.
A long, pointed tooth; a tusk; -- applied especially to certain teeth of horses.
n.
A molding, the convexity of which is one fourth of a circle, being a member just below the abacus in the Tuscan and Roman Doric capital; a torus; an ovolo.
v. i. & t.
To struggle, as in sport; to scuffle; to struggle with.
n.
A plant of the genus Hypericum (H. Androsoemum), from which a healing ointment is prepared in Spain; -- called also parkleaves.
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