What is the meaning of BEEF AND-MUTTON. Phrases containing BEEF AND-MUTTON
See meanings and uses of BEEF AND-MUTTON!Slangs & AI meanings
Bees and honey is London Cockney rhyming slang for money.
Boiled beef and carrot is London Cockney rhyming slang for blood (claret).
Bully beef is British slang for a bully.Bully beef is London Cockney rhyming slang for chief.Bully beef is north English rhyming slang for deaf.
 (1) (v) Raise hue-and-cry. (2) (n) Thief. (Cockney Rhyming slang) = Hot Beef! = Stop Thief!
Birds and bees is London Cockney rhyming slang for the knees.
Seafood and beef dinner (Surf 'n Turf in the USA)
Money. Can't go in there without any bees.
Beef curtains is slang for breasts.
money. Cockney rhyming slang from the late 1800s. Also shortened to beesum (from bees and, bees 'n', to beesum).
Pudding and beef is London Cockney rhyming slang for a chief prison officer (chief).
Beef is slang for a complaint or to complain. Beef is slang for an argument.Beef is slang for sexual intercourse.
Another term for reef rash. Example: “Dude-bro, I got full beef jerky from hitting that reef, bro- brah.
Beef and mutton is London Cockney rhyming slang for a glutton.
Ham and beef was th century British prison rhyming slang for a chief warder (chief).
All beer and skittles is British slang for an easy life.
n A complaint. int.v: beefed, beefing, beefs To complain.
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n.
An insect of the order Hymenoptera, and family Apidae (the honeybees), or family Andrenidae (the solitary bees.) See Honeybee.
a.
Of, pertaining to, or resembling, beef.
conj.
If; though. See An, conj.
adv.
Of each; an equal quantity; as, wine and honey, ana (or, contracted, aa), / ij., that is, of wine and honey, each, two ounces.
n.
A long, fleshy piece, as of beef, cut from the flank or leg; a sort of steak.
n.
Tracts of land consisting of sand, like the deserts of Arabia and Africa; also, extensive tracts of sand exposed by the ebb of the tide.
a.
Having much beef; of the nature of beef; resembling beef; fleshy.
n.
The flesh of an ox, or cow, or of any adult bovine animal, when slaughtered for food.
n.
An animal of the genus Bos, especially the common species, B. taurus, including the bull, cow, and ox, in their full grown state; esp., an ox or cow fattened for food.
v. t.
That part of a sail which is taken in or let out by means of the reef points, in order to adapt the size of the sail to the force of the wind.
n.
Jerked beef; beef cut into long strips and dried in the wind and sun.
n.
Pieces of hard wood bolted to the sides of the bowsprit, to reeve the fore-topmast stays through; -- called also bee blocks.
n.
A neighborly gathering of people who engage in united labor for the benefit of an individual or family; as, a quilting bee; a husking bee; a raising bee.
n.
A biennial plant of the genus Beta, which produces an edible root the first year and seed the second year.
n.
Applied colloquially to human flesh.
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