What is the meaning of OAK AND-ASH. Phrases containing OAK AND-ASH
See meanings and uses of OAK AND-ASH!Slangs & AI meanings
In a game of pool, if a player wins without the other player having sunk any, the loser has to dak himself and do a lap of the table.
Oak and ash is British theatre rhyming slang for cash.
Ash and oak is London Cockney rhyming slang for cigarette (smoke).
Soak is American and Canadian slang for to overcharge. Soak is British slang for to pawn.Soak is slang for a person who drinks to excess.
Gospel oak is old London Cockney rhyming slang for a joke.
Yak is slang for noisy, stupid and incessant talking. Yak is slang for a laugh or joke.Yak is American slang for to vomit
OK was slang and is now colloquial English for all right, correct.
Quaker oat is London Cockney rhyming slang for coat.
Boak is Scottish slang for to vomit.
Old oak is British rhyming slang for London (the Smoke).
Oak is British slang for joke.
Boat and oar is London Cockney rhyming slang for a whore.
A long oar lashed to the stern of a boat, and used as a rudder.
Noun. An unsophisticated, uncultured and objectionable person. Derog.
Zak is South African slang for money.
Hearts of oak is London Cockney rhyming slang for without money (broke).
Used in insignia as a tribute to the days when ships were built of oak.
Oik is derogatory British slang for a person regarded as inferior because of being ignorant, ill−educated, or lower−class.
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n.
The acorn or mast of the oak and similar fruits.
v. t.
To cause or suffer to lie in a fluid till the substance has imbibed what it can contain; to macerate in water or other liquid; to steep, as for the purpose of softening or freshening; as, to soak cloth; to soak bread; to soak salt meat, salt fish, or the like.
v. t.
To manage; as, I hand my oar.
n.
The strong wood or timber of the oak.
n.
A musical pipe made of oat straw.
n.
A young oak.
v. i.
To lie steeping in water or other liquid; to become sturated; as, let the cloth lie and soak.
n.
Any tree or shrub of the genus Quercus. The oaks have alternate leaves, often variously lobed, and staminate flowers in catkins. The fruit is a smooth nut, called an acorn, which is more or less inclosed in a scaly involucre called the cup or cupule. There are now recognized about three hundred species, of which nearly fifty occur in the United States, the rest in Europe, Asia, and the other parts of North America, a very few barely reaching the northern parts of South America and Africa. Many of the oaks form forest trees of grand proportions and live many centuries. The wood is usually hard and tough, and provided with conspicuous medullary rays, forming the silver grain.
n.
A genus of trees constituted by the oak. See Oak.
a.
Made of oak.
n.
A species of oak (Quercus cerris) native in the Orient and southern Europe; -- called also bitter oak and Turkey oak.
n.
The yellow inner bark of the Quercus tinctoria, the American black oak, yellow oak, dyer's oak, or quercitron oak, a large forest tree growing from Maine to eastern Texas.
n
An oarsman; a rower; as, he is a good oar.
n
An implement for impelling a boat, being a slender piece of timber, usually ash or spruce, with a grip or handle at one end and a broad blade at the other. The part which rests in the rowlock is called the loom.
n.
Oak.
a.
Having two coalescent cotyledons, as the live oak and the horse-chestnut.
v. t.
To soak water; to fill the interstices of with water.
n.
The holm oak (Quercus Ilex).
n.
Resembling oak; strong.
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