What is the meaning of BEAK. Phrases containing BEAK
See meanings and uses of BEAK!Slangs & AI meanings
Ollie Beak is London Cockney rhyming slang for Sikh.
Adj. High on cocaine. E.g."We had a great night, everyone was well beaked up."
 Poultry stealing
Beak is English slang for a magistrate or judge.Beak is slang for a person's nose, especially one that is large, pointed, or hooked.
Beak
Nose
Judge or magistrate
n penis. A common misconception is that, to Brits, this means “chin” - hence the phrase “keep your pecker up.” Sorry folks, but in the U.K. “pecker” means exactly the same thing as it does in the U.S. The phrase “keep your pecker up” is probably derived from a time when a “pecker” was simply a reference to a bird’s beak and encouraged keeping your head held high. I understand that the word became a euphemism for “penis” after the poet Catullus used it to refer to his love Lesbia’s pet sparrow in a rather suggestive poem which drew some fairly blatant parallels.
1. The ram on the prow of a fighting galley of ancient and medieval times. 2. The protruding part of the foremost section of a sailing ship of the 16th to the 18th century, usually ornate, used as a working platform by sailors handling the sails of the bowsprit. It also housed the crew's heads (toilets).
Beaker is slang for a fowl, a chicken.
Beaker−hauler is slang for a poultry thief who sells stolen poultry door−to−door.
To masturbate.
Beak off is Irish slang for to play truant.
 Magistrate
nose ¬
Sticky beak is Australian slang for an interfering, inquisitive person.
1 n mouth. Almost always used in the context “shut your gob.” 2 v spit: The pikey fucker just gobbed down my shirt! It’s possible the word is derived from Gaelic, where it means a bird’s beak, or from the English navy, where it was used widely to refer to the toilet.
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n.
A form of weighing machine for heavy wares, consisting of two horizontal bars crossing each other, beaked at the extremities, and supported by a wooden pillar. It is now mostly disused.
n.
Any beaklike prolongation, esp. of the head of an animal, as the beak of birds.
a.
Having the form of a beak.
a.
Furnished with a process or a mouth like a beak; rostrate.
n.
Same as Beak, 3.
a.
Having a beak or a beaklike point; beak-shaped.
n.
A variety of the domestic pigeon, remarkable for its short beak.
n.
The beak, or sucking mouth parts, of Hemiptera.
n.
A molding whose section is thought to resemble a beak.
n.
An ornament used in rich Norman doorways, resembling a head with a beak.
n.
Anything projecting or ending in a point, like a beak, as a promontory of land.
n.
A slender marine fish (Scomberesox saurus) of Europe and America. It has long, thin, beaklike jaws. Called also billfish, gowdnook, gawnook, skipper, skipjack, skopster, lizard fish, and Egypt herring.
n.
A bickern; a bench anvil with a long beak, adapted to reach the interior surface of sheet metal ware; the horn of an anvil.
n.
A beam, shod or armed at the end with a metal head or point, and projecting from the prow of an ancient galley, in order to pierce the vessel of an enemy; a beakhead.
n.
Any process somewhat like the beak of a bird, terminating the fruit or other parts of a plant.
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A little rostrum, or beak, as of an insect.
n.
The beak or head of a ship.
a.
Having the nostrils prolonged in the form of horny tubes along the sides of the beak; -- said of certain sea birds.
n.
The Beaks; the stage or platform in the forum where orations, pleadings, funeral harangues, etc., were delivered; -- so called because after the Latin war, it was adorned with the beaks of captured vessels; later, applied also to other platforms erected in Rome for the use of public orators.
n.
A pair of forceps of various kinds, having a beaklike form.
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