What is the meaning of HUD. Phrases containing HUD
See meanings and uses of HUD!Slangs & AI meanings
Roy Hudd is London Cockney rhyming slang for potato (spud). Roy Hudd is London Cockney rhyming slang for blood.
How You Doing?
Seaman that might be found huddling around the funnel to keep warm.
Heads Up Display. A transparent screen mounted on the dashboard on which pertinent data from flight instruments and weapons systems are projected.The HUD eliminates the need to look down into the cockpit to read instruments.
campfire; huddled around the campfire telling stories as you would congregate around the television back home.
Actor died of AIDS October 2, 1985. Name at birth: Leroy Harold Scherer, Jr. Full bio information available at: http://www.answers.com/topic/rock-hudson
a pound coin (£1) or money generally. The older nuggets meaning of money obviously alludes to gold nuggets and appeared first in the 1800s. Much more recently (thanks G Hudson) logically since the pound coin was introduced in the UK in the 1990s with the pound note's withdrawal, nugget seems to have appeared as a specific term for a pound coin, presumably because the pound coin is golden (actually more brassy than gold) and 'nuggety' in feel.
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prep.
From the coast towards the interior of, as a country; from the mouth towards the source of, as a stream; as, to journey up the country; to sail up the Hudson.
n.
One who huddles things together.
a.
Of or pertaining to Hudson's Bay or to the Hudson River; as, the Hudsonian curlew.
v. t.
To crowd (things) together to mingle confusedly; to assemble without order or system.
v. t.
To do, make, or put, in haste or roughly; hence, to do imperfectly; -- usually with a following preposition or adverb; as, to huddle on; to huddle up; to huddle together.
n.
A huck or hull, as of a nut.
v. i.
To cower; to huddle together; to squat; to sit, as a hen on eggs.
n.
The American red squirrel (Sciurus Hudsonius); -- so called from its cry.
v. t. & i.
To huddle or lie together like pigs, in one bed.
n.
An iron bucket for hoisting coal or ore.
v. t.
To sweep, snatch, draw, or huddle together; to take by a promiscuous sweep.
imp. & p. p.
of Huddle
n.
A crowd; a number of persons or things crowded together in a confused manner; tumult; confusion.
n.
One of several species of long-billed, wading birds of the genus Limosa, and family Tringidae. The European black-tailed godwit (Limosa limosa), the American marbled godwit (L. fedoa), the Hudsonian godwit (L. haemastica), and others, are valued as game birds. Called also godwin.
a.
Similar to, or in the style of, the poem "Hudibras," by Samuel Butler; in the style of doggerel verse.
n.
A bar in a river; as, the overslaugh in the Hudson River.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Huddle
v. i.
To press together promiscuously, from confusion, apprehension, or the like; to crowd together confusedly; to press or hurry in disorder; to crowd.
n. pl.
An Algonquin tribe of Indians, inhabiting a large part of British America east of the Rocky Mountains and south of Hudson's Bay.
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