What is the meaning of BOUNCING. Phrases containing BOUNCING
See meanings and uses of BOUNCING!Slangs & AI meanings
To play notes so low as to bounce a Bose speaker from its foundation.I'm sorry, my bass player was just "Bose bouncing.
The little paved area, below pavement level, usually surrounded by railings, outside the basement of a posh terraced house. The Contributor writes "My mum and dad also used this one, thirty years before me (I'm 24), and my mum thinks it's short for 'area'. Heard in the words chanted along to a ball-bouncing game. One, two, three, O'Lairey My ball went down the airey'. She has no idea who O'Lairey was or what he had to do with the airey.
(1) To play "horsey" involved using a skiiping rope as reins around willing pupils neck then basically running around like a horse and master (not as kinky and more fun than it sounds when your 8 years old), (2) Term also used for riding a child on your back (also called piggyback) or dandling a child on your knee, and lately has been referred to as a term for molesting children (i.e. straddling a youngster on your knee and bouncing them up and down).
Cocaine
Bouncing a dart off a wire
 A bouncing fellow or girl.
Huge, lusty, bouncing, as, 'a strapping lass.
cocaine
Noun. A monetary cheque (check) that isn't honoured by the writer's bank, consequently bouncing back to the issuer.
n shock absorber. The part of a vehicleÂ’s suspension system that stops the suspension from bouncing (rather than actually absorbing any shock).
Large, heavy. "Sally gave birth to a bouncing baby girl.
Cheque. He stuck me with a bouncing goose.
explosive that propells upward about four feet into the air and then detonates.
artillery round incorporating many small bomblets which are ejected over a target area and explode in 'bouncing-betty' fashion almost simultaneously, the name comes from the fast popping sound (best heard at a distance).
n sort of lawyer. Barristers are different from solicitors in such a convoluted way it took a barrister a whole page of ball-bouncingly dull prose to explain it to me.
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p. pr. & vb. n.
of Bounce
a.
Excessive; big.
n.
A common plant (Saponaria officinalis) of the Pink family; -- so called because its bruised leaves, when agitated in water, produce a lather like that from soap. Called also Bouncing Bet.
a.
Stout; plump and healthy; lusty; buxom.
adv.
With a bounce.
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