What is the meaning of CLEMENT FREUD. Phrases containing CLEMENT FREUD
See meanings and uses of CLEMENT FREUD!Slangs & AI meanings
hemorrhoid. Oooh, me clements!
Read And Enjoyed, But No Comment
Anyone in the Infantry. Refers to the fact that you likely need a hammer and chisel to penetrate the thick skull.
Comment When Done.
Covered cement car
Used as an alternative to jizz, spunk, cock custard etc etc. Simple, yet descriptive word. (ed: sounds like another attempt to subvert us into insulting someone if you ask me!)
Serviceman in the land element.
Noun. Haemorrhoids. From the rhyming slang on Emma Freud, broadcaster, writer, and daughter of Sir Clement Freud.
rude comment
I have a comment
I'd Rather Not Comment On That
Your Comment To
an offensive comment
Rubber cement rolled into balls, burned and the fumes are inhaled
Used in reference to minorities in terms of location. Example: This neighborhhod was nice until the element moved in. Not necessarily specific to Blacks.
Obligatory On Topic Comment
Clement Freuds is London Cockney rhyming slang for haemorrhoids.
rubber cement rolled into balls, burned and the fumes are inhaled
St Clement is London Cockney rhyming slang for a lemon.
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a.
Physically severe or harsh (generally restricted to the elements or weather); rough; boisterous; stormy; rigorously cold, etc.; as, inclement weather.
a.
Not clement; destitute of a mild and kind temper; void of tenderness; unmerciful; severe; harsh.
n.
The simplest or fundamental principles of any system in philosophy, science, or art; rudiments; as, the elements of geometry, or of music.
v. t.
To comment on.
n.
Mildness or softness of the elements; as, the clemency of the season.
v. t.
To constitute; to make up with elements.
n.
Any outline or sketch, regarded as containing the fundamental ideas or features of the thing in question; as, the elements of a plan.
n.
To overlay or coat with cement; as, to cement a cellar bottom.
n.
The four elements were, air, earth, water, and fire
n.
One of the necessary data or values upon which a system of calculations depends, or general conclusions are based; as, the elements of a planet's orbit.
n.
To unite or cause to adhere by means of a cement.
n.
An infinitesimal part of anything of the same nature as the entire magnitude considered; as, in a solid an element may be the infinitesimal portion between any two planes that are separated an indefinitely small distance. In the calculus, element is sometimes used as synonymous with differential.
n.
One of the ultimate parts which are variously combined in anything; as, letters are the elements of written language; hence, also, a simple portion of that which is complex, as a shaft, lever, wheel, or any simple part in a machine; one of the essential ingredients of any mixture; a constituent part; as, quartz, feldspar, and mica are the elements of granite.
n.
The elements of the alchemists were salt, sulphur, and mercury.
n.
One of the ultimate, undecomposable constituents of any kind of matter. Specifically: (Chem.) A substance which cannot be decomposed into different kinds of matter by any means at present employed; as, the elements of water are oxygen and hydrogen.
n.
One out of several parts combined in a system of aggregation, when each is of the nature of the whole; as, a single cell is an element of the honeycomb.
n.
Sometimes a curve, or surface, or volume is considered as described by a moving point, or curve, or surface, the latter being at any instant called an element of the former.
n.
Clemency.
v. t.
To compound of elements or first principles.
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