What is the meaning of DUCT. Phrases containing DUCT
See meanings and uses of DUCT!Slangs & AI meanings
Air-conditioning ducts and electrical cable wire-ways that pass above on the deckhead.
Fiberglass insulation blankets commonly attached to pipes and ducts.
cocaine
The color of cast iron after weathering or "black" pipe - plumber's term for ungalvanized cast/ductile iron.
n duct tape. Sort of. The heavy, slightly meshed sticky tape used to silence potential murder victims and to reliably and effectively attach small animals to tables. Unlike duct tape, gaffer tape is designed not to melt onto things, and is used extensively in the theatre and film industry. Probably derived from the fact that the Gaffer is the chief electrician on a film set.
The ceiling of any enclosed space below decks in a vessel, which on a warship usually contains a mass of ducts, pipes and wiring harneses.
Cocaine
DUCT
Slangs & AI derived meanings
adj. flamboyant, very dramatic or attempting to be spectacular. (***History behind the word: The slang alludes to a Vietnam-era G.I. slang acronym for a particularly bad combat situation, which stands for "Fu*^ed Up, Got Ambushed, Zipped In."Â "Them ni*^as over on the north side is a bunch of fougazie bi*^ches; we keeps it grimy over here on the south side."Â
These people are the bus equivalent of trainspotters. They would sometimes have various bus time-tables or pin badges with buses on them. At weekends can be found watching buses at the bus station and noting down when they arrive and depart.
Humdinger is American slang for an excellent person or thing.
Girls' term for a handsome or otherwise attractive boy. "Ooh, he's such a hunk!"
To Fuck
  To betray, swindle or cheat.
Chow down is American slang for to eat a sit down meal.
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n.
The quality of being tractile; ductility.
n.
The quality or state of being rigid; want of pliability; the quality of resisting change of form; the amount of resistance with which a body opposes change of form; -- opposed to flexibility, ductility, malleability, and softness.
n.
A vessel; a duct.
n.
An elevation, or crest, in the wall of the urethra where the seminal ducts enter it.
a.
Consisting of, or containing, vessels as an essential part of a structure; full of vessels; specifically (Bot.), pertaining to, or containing, special ducts, or tubes, for the circulation of sap.
n.
An instrument for accurately determining the ductility of metals.
n.
A continuous tube formed from superposed large cylindrical or prismatic cells (tracheae), which have lost their intervening partitions, and are usually marked with dots, pits, rings, or spirals by internal deposition of secondary membranes; a duct.
a.
Capable of being drawn out in length; ductile.
a.
Of or pertaining to saliva; producing or carrying saliva; as, the salivary ferment; the salivary glands; the salivary ducts, etc.
a.
Having the form of a vessel, or duct.
a.
Easily led; tractable; complying; yielding to motives, persuasion, or instruction; as, a ductile people.
v. t.
To hammer or forge with a tilt hammer; as, to tilt steel in order to render it more ductile.
a.
Having to duct or outlet; as, a ductless gland.
a.
Capable of being extended or drawn out; ductile; tensible.
n.
An alloy of copper and zinc, resembling brass, and containing about 84 per cent of copper; -- called also German, / Dutch, brass. It is very malleable and ductile, and when beaten into thin leaves is sometimes called Dutch metal. The addition of arsenic makes white tombac.
a.
Crossbarred, as the ducts in a banana stem.
a.
Capable of extension; ductile; tensible.
n.
The duct which conveys the urine from the kidney to the bladder or cloaca. There are two ureters, one for each kidney.
n.
The process by which blister steel is rendered ductile by being forged with a tilt hammer.
n.
One of the large cells in woody tissue which have spiral, annular, or other markings, and are connected longitudinally so as to form continuous ducts.
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