What is the meaning of BUGS. Phrases containing BUGS
See meanings and uses of BUGS!Slangs & AI meanings
Mysterious disease or ailment transmitted to you by getting to close to someone who was dirty or smelly, and that you could in turn transmit to other people by touching them. e.g. if you got too close to someone who was dirty you then had 'the bugs'. People who were particularly dirty were called either 'bugsy boy' or 'bugsy girl'. Note. You could protect yourself from the bugs by clutching the top of your arm (I'd imagine this came from holding the area where you had your inoculation jab) and shouting, '1,2,3,4,5 bugs injection all over for life'. This was a primary school practise and died out by the time you got to secondary school.
Bugs bunny is British rhyming slang for money.
Friend. Phrase used as in the Hucklberry Hound cartoon series which itself was a derivative of the Bugs Bunny phrase "What's up Doc?".
Bugs in the rug is nursing slang for pubic lice.
A short cruise undertaken immediately after refit to ensure that there are no immediate glaring bugs in the systems.
Also known as speed, this drug is a stimulant that is the amphetamine of choice for street use. At one time methamphetamine was prescribed for use as a diet pill, but it is no longer used therapeutically. Methamphetamine may be taken in a variety of ways: by mouth, injection, snorting, or smoking. Methamphetamine is easily synthesized, making its illicit manufacture for sale on the street relatively simple. Prior to the popularity of cocaine, methamphetamine was the most commonly used stimulant. The effects and dangers of methamphetamine use are characteristic of other stimulants. However, chronic users of methamphetamine typically develop delusions of bugs crawling under their skin, leading the user to scratch the skin repeatedly and cause characteristic lesions. Another complication is the formation of local dilations of small arteries, resembling a naturally occurring illness called periarteritis nodosa, which can lead to kidney failure or brain hemorrhages. These two complications are rarely seen with other stimulants. Like "crack" cocaine, crystals of the drug, called "ice", can be smoked, with an immediate effect similar to direct intravenous injection. The difference between "ice" and "crack" is that the methamphetamine high lasts for hours rather than the shorter cocaine high. "Ice" originated in Hawaii in 1987 but has since spread east across parts of the mainland United States. Although it was feared that "ice" might replace "crack," this has not yet happened.
Bugsy is British slang for a mad person.
Money. I've got some Bugs bunny in me sky rocket and I'm off down the rub-a-dub-dub.
Noun. Money. Rhyming slang. [Orig. Aust.]
Important person, official, boss. "He's one of the railroad big bugs."
Someone who annoys you or bugs you constantly. Used as "Oi knob-scratch piss off!" Contributor says the following "Originated from Y11 at the Rawlett school in Tamworth UK. This word was mainly used to describe his friend 'Aaron'.
A comb, e.g. "lend us yer bug rake... ma head's itching...) Derived from bugs (head lice) which were far more common in that era.
Fellow addicts
A 'Daybug' was a pupil at a boarding school who lived locally and did not reside in the school, officially referred to as a 'Dayboy'. They were usually seen as lazy, demotivated, and always going home early.
Money
Don't Let The Bed Bugs Bite
BUGS
BUGS
BUGS
BUGS
BUGS
BUGS
BUGS
a.
Infested or abounding with bugs.
n. sing. & pl.
A noxious or mischievous animal; especially, noxious little animals or insects, collectively, as squirrels, rats, mice, flies, lice, bugs, etc.
a.
The state of being infested with bugs.
n.
A snug, comfortable, or cozy residence or situation; a retreat, or place of habitual resort; hence, those who occupy a nest, frequent a haunt, or are associated in the same pursuit; as, a nest of traitors; a nest of bugs.
BUGS
BUGS
BUGS