What is the meaning of WROTE. Phrases containing WROTE
See meanings and uses of WROTE!Slangs & AI meanings
Contributor wrote the following (entered verbatim): "While having intercourse my girlfriend stoppped and started doing kegels., does anyone out there know what kegels mean!!! alls i knwo is that it ahs to do with sexual stuff!! Please help figure out what this word means. I will die if i don't find out!!!!" So if anyone can help, please send a definition in and also let us know where it was used and when. (ed: this entry has produced dozens of responses telling us the what, when and how of kegels. The exercises themselves aren't a surprise, but what amazes me is the number of people who've looked it up!! But I promise I'll get round to adding the best soon.)
'Manners' was a term used to point out that another kid was inferior to you, in the way they dressed, at sports, physically, or just in general. If you were 'under manners' this could also mean that you were in trouble, or being watched by a teacher in class, so had to be quiet. Obviously, it was used to tease and show that you could still continue to behave badly, whilst they were - indeed - 'under manners', I heard this all through secondary school. Incidentally, my school - Quintin Kynaston - was the school that Graham McPherson, 'Suggs' from Madness went to, and wrote the song 'Baggy Trousers' about! (ed: another bit of history recorded for posterity!)
An 'intensifier' that rhymes with 'bairn' and 'cairn'. Use as "Nairn size!", i.e. "That's huge!". Mark wrote in and suggested a possible origin of 'nairn. He remembered that he also used to say 'nairn' or 'nen' to mean “noneâ€, as in "Giz' a sweet man Baz?", who might reply "Aa've got nairn left man!", i.e. "I've got none left!". This might have then been used as an intensifier when it became cool in the late '80's to use negatives and opposites as intensifiers, e.g. 'little ex' ('excellent').
n I wrote a whole chapter about this earlier on, and IÂ’m not writing it again. It begins on page 21.
Abbreviation for "If Destroyed More True". An alternative to IDST, used to discourage the victim from deleting it. e.g. if I wrote 'David is gay IDST', David would cross it out to stop people reading it, but if it was IDMT, I would then say he is more gay than before., 1980s, UK(NE). Some have argued that the IDMT doesn't refer to the IDMT itself, so are careful to cross out the IDMT first, so destroy the message without it becoming more true. e.g. David is gay <-- IDMT becomes (after David sees it) David is gay which is then crossed out. This has led to long chains of IDMTs, e.g. David is gay <-- IDMT <-- IDMT <-- IDMT <-- IDMT <-- IDMT If David is determined to remove the message, he just deletes the last IDMT, then the next one, etc. This loophole can be plugged by putting the last IDMT in a non-obvious place, such as on the back of the lockers it was written on. If David crosses out the last visible IDMT, I then say he hasn't crossed the one out that was round the back, so taunt him about being extremely gay.
n license plate. I already wrote about this under my entry for “registration” and I’ll be damned if I’m writing any more.
n ATM. The term derives from a time many years ago when these devices were nothing more than holes in walls, stocked carefully in the mornings by bank employees. Next to the hole was a notepad, upon which customers wrote their names and the amounts of money they had taken. After some years it became apparent that the system was open to a degree of abuse, and a more elaborate one was invented to replace it. This is not true. Brits do not use the American definition of “hole in the wall” to mean a very small store or food vendor. Of course, this might not be true either. You’ve no way of working out whether to trust me or not now.
adj semi truck which is able to bend in the middle. Of course, I just wrote pretty much the same thing two seconds ago. IÂ’m beginning to understand why the guy who wrote the first Oxford English Dictionary ended up going mad and cutting his penis off.
The "tortured artist" half of a pair of people; "He's the Simon in that relationship.". Derived from Simon and Garfunkel, the 'folk rock' duo of the 1960s. Paul Simon wrote the songs and played guitar, but was less outgoing/talkative than Art Garfunkel.
n American: Hey, did you hear Bob had moved to New York and married a septic? From Cockney rhyming slang “septic tank” / “yank,” where “yank” is in turn used in the U.K. to mean “American.” If you don’t believe me, look it up, but I have to warn you that I also wrote that definition. The Australians use the same term and have further abbreviated septic to “seppo.”
n the standard U.K. measure of beer - equivalent to 0.568 litres in new money or twenty ounces in American money. It is normally possible to buy a half-pint instead of a pint, but doing so will mar you for life in the eyes of your peers. Drinking half-pints of beer is generally seen as the liquid equivalent of painting your fingernails and mincing. At some point in history (no idea when) a British king (not sure which one) elected to raise tax on beer but upon discovering that he needed an act of parliament to change the tax, he instead changed the size of the pint (which only required a royal edict). The smaller sixteen-ounce American pint, therefore actually represents the original size of the British pint. As you can see IÂ’ve not researched this at all. I just wrote down what someone told me. There are many times in my life when IÂ’m forced to make a simple choice between the real truth and a funny story.
v. murder. Derived from the police call sign. This term was popularized in the film Deep Cover in which Dr. Dre produced the soundtrack and introduced a young unknown rapper at the time named Snoop Dogg who wrote the song "1-8-7 on an Undacova cop".Â
A homosexual that Believes in the faith of Christianity. Being this Dictionary is a word study I offer this article I wrote before I left Christianity and became a Pagan. Words have been used against the gay and lesbian committee for centuries. And for many gay Christians, word studies have been there relief from the pain of homophobia.
Clear signal. (At the time Cy Warman wrote his celebrated poem, "I Hope the Lights Are White," the clear signal was white and green meant caution. This was changed years ago because of the fact that when a red or green signal lens broke or fell out it exposed a white, thus giving a clear board to engineers even though the signal itself was set to stop or go slow)
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.
n Solitaire. A card game played alone. I once wrote that the Brits would no doubt start calling it “solitaire” eventually, and some bastard half my age wrote to me to tell me that “mainly older people” call it “patience.” So, sadly, I have to add here that this term is used by “mainly older people.” This reminds me of the time my mother came home in tears when a boy scout had tried to help her across the road. Rather oddly, we Brits also call another game “Solitaire.” Just go and look it up like a man.
adj provoking of further consumption. I once wrote that youÂ’d never find this word in a dictionary, but I had to change when someone pointed out to me that it was in the OED. I hate you all. It means something (usually food) which leads you to want more - Jaffa Cakes, Jelly Babies or dry roasted peanuts would be some good personal examples. ItÂ’s rather light-hearted; you wouldnÂ’t go around describing heroin as moreish, whether it is or not.
Flatulence (act or result) - e.g. "Who woofered?"; "Did you woofer?"; Contributor wrote the following: This was used by my circle of friends for a very brief period in the 9th grade in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada, a suburb about 30 km West of Toronto. We were a pretty straightlaced, upper middle class, but quite ethnically diverse bunch. My first contact, so to speak, with this word occurred when I met a bunch of other kids in the 9th grade (this is 1982, by the way) who had come from another public school. The use of the word more or less ran its course after six months or so, although, it has appeared sporadically on occasion since then, although more or less as a nostalgiac reference to that era.
WROTE
Slangs & AI derived meanings
The "nose" of the ship.
Rock−head is American slang for a stupid person.
Ahort of cash From cockney rhyming slang... boracic lint = skint
hot dog down a hallway (tossing a ...)
Used after unsatisfactory intercourse with an untight vagina.
Blow a fuse is slang for to lose one's temper.
make a huge mistake
Exchange and Mart is London Cockney rhyming slang for a prostitute (tart).
Nude club
Oh, yes.Â
Hoist is slang for to steal, particularly by shoplifting or pickpocketing. Hoist is slang for a thief, particularly a shoplifter or pickpocket.Hoist was th century slang for a two−man robbery in which one man would stand upon the other in order to effect a high−rise entry into a building. Hoist is American slang for to raise and down a drink, particularly beer.
WROTE
WROTE
WROTE
WROTE
WROTE
WROTE
imp.
of Write
v. i.
To root with the snout. See 1st Root.
n.
An historian who distinguishes time by centuries, esp. one of those who wrote the "Magdeburg Centuries." See under Century.
n.
One who gathered news for, and wrote, news-letters.
n.
The material upon which the ancient Egyptians wrote. It was formed by cutting the stem of the plant into thin longitudinal slices, which were gummed together and pressed.
n.
A history of the acts and events of a life; a biography; as, Johnson wrote the life of Milton.
WROTE
WROTE
WROTE