What is the meaning of BURNER. Phrases containing BURNER
See meanings and uses of BURNER!Slangs & AI meanings
A horse, also called hay burner.
Burner is British slang for venereal disease.
Current crisis
A MISSION THAT WRITERS GO ON, WRITING YOUR NAME ANY WHERE AND EVERY WITH AN ABUNDANT AMOUNT OF TAGS OR THROW UPS/ SMOTHERING AN AREA WITH ONES TAG OR THROW UP.
Afterburner; a system that feeds raw fuel into a jet’s hot exhaust, thus greatly increasing both thrust and fuel consumption.
Usually used as a term of abuse by aforementioned chavvies, (at very high speed) "cortherechickeneyebrowbooooooooooooooooooooooyyyy, slapya!". Contributor doesn't know if it was a widely used or a reference to his biology teacher burning her eyebrows off with a bunsen burner and penciling on new ones.
A MISSION THAT WRITERS GO ON, WRITING YOUR NAME ANY WHERE AND EVERY WITH AN ABUNDANT AMOUNT OF TAGS OR THROW UPS/ SMOTHERING AN AREA WITH ONES TAG OR THROW UP.
Slum burner is slang for an army cook.
In a submarine, a system that burns carbon monoxide and hydrogen out of the air, converting H2 to water and CO to CO2. CO2 is then removed by the "scrubber".
A drink of whiskey.
Putting sand through the firedoor of an oil burner while working the engine hard; this cuts out the soot in the flues and makes the locomotive steam. Also known as giving the old girl a dose of salts
Originally in Sinatra slang this was a stylish, classy woman, but today, it can even be applied to a good football game.Hey, Quincy, did you see Stella over at the diner? Man, she is one amazing "barn burner."
A book from the 1950's set in Florida (_The Lotus Eaters_) used Stovelid, which makes some sense if you've ever operated a big wood stove - the lids are the disks set into the big holes on top (these eventually became burners when the design was refined to use gas or electric).
a horse, also called hay burner.
Hand oil lantern, inspection torch. Also a horse used in railroad or streetcar service
money, usually unexpected gain and extra to an agreed or predicted payment, typically not realised by the payer. Earlier English spelling was bunts or bunse, dating from the late 1700s or early 1800s (Cassells and Partridge). Origins are not certain. Bunts also used to refer to unwanted or unaccounted-for goods sold for a crafty gain by workers, and activity typically hidden from the business owner. Suggestions of origin include a supposed cockney rhyming slang shortening of bunsen burner (
Bunsen burner is London Cockney rhyming slang for earner. Bunsen burner is cricket rhyming slang for a turner.
n rangetop; stovetop. The top bit of a cooker with the burners on it, where you put pans and things.
a First Nations person
This insult suggested one was unstable.
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n.
The part of a lamp, gas fixture, etc., where the flame is produced.
n.
A circle or cluster of gas-burners for lighting and ventilating public buildings.
n.
A gas jet or burner.
n.
A furnace or stove in which the fuel is contained in a hopper or chamber, and is fed to the fire as the lower stratum is consumed.
n.
A rose burner. See under Rose.
a.
Shaped like a bat's wing; as, a bat's-wing burner.
n.
An end piece or part; a piece, as a cap, nozzle, ferrule, or point, applied to the extreme end of anything; as, a tip for an umbrella, a shoe, a gas burner, etc.
n.
One who, or that which, burns or sets fire to anything.
n.
The jet piece of a gas fixture where the gas is burned as it escapes from one or more minute orifices.
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