What is the meaning of ALDERSHOT LADIES. Phrases containing ALDERSHOT LADIES
See meanings and uses of ALDERSHOT LADIES!Slangs & AI meanings
Not exactly slang, but what is it? Often utilized by the "painted ladies" in the west, laudanum was opium mixed with liquor.
A covering for the head, usually worn by ladies to protect their head-dresses when going to evening parties, the theatre, etc.
The person in charge of the "girls" at a brothel or saloon. Their job was to keep the "ladies" in line.
Female senior citizens who sell OxyContin
Depressants
Prostitutes.
(ed: def. entered as submitted) Have to chase the boy and if I caught them I had to suck their roots for rest of break and give them my dinner money. But if the dinner ladies saw me I used to get told off. I love men me. (ed: yeeess... give us a call when you have less time... ok??)
When the RCN wore square rig, this was a sailor's best uniform, which was often tailor-made and saved for extra-special occasions. Often, it couldn't be worn on parade as it was sometimes illegally altered, however it could be worn ashore when the sailor wished to impress the ladies.
Present a fine figure. "He sure is cutting a swell with the ladies."
Aldershot whore is British rhyming slang for four.
When in port, and with the crew restricted to the ship for any extended period of time, wives and ladies of easy virtue often were allowed to live aboard along with the crew. Infrequently, but not uncommonly, children were born aboard, and a convenient place for this was between guns on the gun deck.
Communications School, the birthplace of many "Bunting Tossers" and "Radio Ladies".
To stop talking to someone - literally. Came from the old story about Lady Godiva riding naked through the streets of Coventry in the Middle Ages to protest about the taxes her husband was laying on the serfs. Most of the townsfolk spared the ladies blushes by staying indoors on the day of the ride, but one man - called Tom - 'peeped' and was apparantly blinded by the sight of her naked body, but either way was shunned and ignored by his neighbours for evermore.
An epithet applied to literary ladies.
Aldershot ladies is British bingo slang for the number .
Ladies and gents is London Cockney rhyming slang for common sense.
Two fat ladies is bingo slang for the number eighty−eight.
A pad stuffed with cotton or feathers, worn by ladies for the double purpose of giving a greater prominence to the hips, and setting off the smallness of the waist.
barbiturates
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a.
Of or pertaining to a very large natural order of plants (Rubiaceae) named after the madder (Rubia tinctoria), and including about three hundred and seventy genera and over four thousand species. Among them are the coffee tree, the trees yielding peruvian bark and quinine, the madder, the quaker ladies, and the trees bearing the edible fruits called genipap and Sierre Leone peach, besides many plants noted for the beauty or the fragrance of their blossoms.
n.
A thin silk fabric used for linings, etc., in ladies' dresses.
pl.
of Lady
n.
My lady; -- a French title formerly given to ladies of quality; now, in France, given to all married women.
n.
A circle, or combination of circles, of thin whalebone, metal, or other elastic material, used for expanding the skirts of ladies' dresses; crinoline; -- used chiefly in the plural.
n.
A kind of large cape, or short, full cloak, forming part of the dress of ladies.
n.
One whose occupation is to cut out and make men's garments; also, one who cuts out and makes ladies' outer garments.
n.
A plain, stout, lustrous silk, used for ladies' dresses and for ribbon.
a.
Having the lower incisor teeth projecting beyond the upper ones, as in the bulldog.
n.
Music sung or performed in the open air at nights; -- usually applied to musical entertainments given in the open air at night, especially by gentlemen, in a spirit of gallantry, under the windows of ladies.
n.
A box to contain such perfume, formerly carried by ladies, as at the end of a chain; -- more properly pomander box.
a.
Moved by water passing beneath; -- said of a water wheel, and opposed to overshot; as, an undershot wheel.
n.
A border of lace or other material, worn on the inner front edge of ladies' bonnets.
n.
A water wheel, on which the stream of water strikes neither so high as in the overshot wheel, nor so low as in the undershot, but generally at about half the height of the wheel, being kept in contact with it by the breasting. The water acts on the float boards partly by impulse, partly by its weight.
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