What is the meaning of FORK. Phrases containing FORK
See meanings and uses of FORK!Slangs & AI meanings
A plastic eating utensil that is both a spoon and a fork. Possibly first available at Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurants.
A low term for hands or fingers. "Keep your muck forks off me!"
n. acronym for "Just Riding Along," a phrase universally uttered by people bringing both halves of their frame and the remains of their fork in for warrantee replacement.
Hawk the fork is Australian slang for work as a prostitute.
Forks is slang for fingers
Fork. Keep your fingers out of your grub, man. Use a duke
Fork and knife is London Cockney rhyming slang for life.Fork and knife was old London Cockney rhyming slang for wife.
To fork out is slang for to pay money, usually with reluctance.
Knife and fork is London Cockney rhyming slang for pork.
Railroad eating house. Bill of fare is colloquially known as switch list, fork is hook, butter is grease pot, hotcakes are blind gaskets, and beans are torpedoes
Fork is British slang for a pickpocket.
 To die. Compare “pegging-out,†“hopping the twig,†and similar flippancies.
Eating utensils: Knife, Fork, Spoon.
Train order that does not have to be signed for. Operator can hand it on a hoop or delivery fork as the train slows down. (See 31 order)
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n.
One of several Asiatic and East Indian passerine birds, belonging to Enucurus, and allied genera. The tail is deeply forking.
a.
Opening into two or more parts or shoots; forked; furcated.
v. t.
To raise, or pitch with a fork, as hay; to dig or turn over with a fork, as the soil.
n.
The place where a division or a union occurs; the angle or opening between two branches or limbs; as, the fork of a river, a tree, or a road.
a.
Divided into three parts, or into threes; three-forked; as, a trichotomous stem.
n.
A European fish (Raniceps raninus), having a large flat head; -- also called tadpole fish, and lesser forked beard.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Fork
n.
Something having three forks or prongs, as a trident.
n.
Anything furcate or like a fork in shape, or furcate at the extremity; as, a tuning fork.
a.
Having no fork.
n.
The European forked hake or hake's-dame (Phycis blennoides); -- also called great forked beard.
imp. & p. p.
of Fork
n.
A tyrant flycatcher (Milvulus forficatus) of the Southern United States and Mexico, which has a deeply forked tail. It is light gray above, white beneath, salmon on the flanks, and fiery red at the base of the crown feathers.
a.
Formed into a forklike shape; having a fork; dividing into two or more prongs or branches; furcated; bifurcated; zigzag; as, the forked lighting.
a.
Divided into two parts, somewhat after the manner of a fork; dichotomous.
a.
Having three branches or forks; trichotomous.
a.
Having three furrows, forks, or prongs; having three grooves or sulci; three-grooved.
v. i.
To divide into two or more branches; as, a road, a tree, or a stream forks.
n.
The quality or state or dividing in a forklike manner.
n.
Any one of several species of brilliant South American humming birds of the genus Sappho, having very bright-colored and deeply forked tails; -- called also firetail.
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