What is the meaning of OATS. Phrases containing OATS
See meanings and uses of OATS!Slangs & AI meanings
Oats and chaff is London Cockney rhyming slang for path.
Noun. 1. Sperm, with regard to being seeds. Used in phrases such as sow one's oats, which essentially alludes to procreation but at its most basic to having to sexual intercourse. 2. Sex. The informal phrase get ones oats meaning to have sex. E.g."You look a bit happy! Did you get your oats last night?"
To indulge in behaviours whilst young that are frowned on when adult, such as fequent changes in sexual partners. Hence the expression "To sow ones wild oats all Saturday night and spend all day Sunday praying for crop failure!"
Oatsy is slang for spirited, assertive, restive.
Wild oats is slang for the indiscretions of youth, especially dissoluteness before settling down.
To feel one's oats is slang for to be conceited or self−important.
Oats and barley is London Cockney rhyming slang for Charlie.
Get one's oats is slang for to have sexual intercourse.
Sow one's wild oats is slang for to indulge in adventure or promiscuity.
Vrb phrs. To have sexual intercourse, usually during a period of youthful sexual promiscuity.
Oats is slang for sperm (with regard to being seeds). Oats is British slang for sexual gratification.
Spew the wild oats is American slang for to vomit
John O'Groats is London Cockney rhyming slang for sexual gratification (oats).
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n.
The oat; oats.
n.
The outer husk, pod, or shell, as of oats, pease, etc.; sheal; shell.
n.
The fruit of certain grasses which furnish the chief food of man, as corn, wheat, rye, oats, etc., or the plants themselves; -- used collectively.
n.
Dry food for domestic animals, as hay, straw, corn, oats, or a mixture of ground grain; feed.
pl.
of Oat
n.
Meal made of oats.
v.t.
To feed, as cattle, with dry food or cut grass, etc.;to furnish with hay, straw, oats, etc.
v. t.
To beat out grain from, as straw or husks; to beat the straw or husk of (grain) with a flail; to beat off, as the kernels of grain; as, to thrash wheat, rye, or oats; to thrash over the old straw.
n.
A kind of oats.
n.
A stalk or stem of certain species of grain, pulse, etc., especially of wheat, rye, oats, barley, more rarely of buckwheat, beans, and pease.
n.
Groats; hulled oats.
n.
Grain (esp. maize, rye, or oats) that is coarsely ground and unbolted; also, a kind of flour made from beans, pease, etc.; sometimes, any flour, esp. if coarse.
v. t.
To bruise; to grind coarsely; as, kibbled oats.
n.
The stumps of wheat, rye, barley, oats, or buckwheat, left in the ground; the part of the stalk left by the scythe or sickle.
n.
A bag for oats or oatmeal.
n.
Grain, esp. oats or wheat, hulled and coarsely ground; in high milling, fragments of cracked wheat smaller than groats.
n.
A Scotch measure, formerly in use: for wheat and beans it contained four Winchester bushels; for oats, barley, and potatoes, six bushels. A boll of meal is 140 lbs. avoirdupois. Also, a measure for salt of two bushels.
n.
The stem or main axis of a plant; as, a stalk of wheat, rye, or oats; the stalks of maize or hemp.
v. t.
To separate the kernels of (an ear of Indian corn, wheat, oats, etc.) from the cob, ear, or husk.
n. pl.
Dried grain, as oats or wheat, hulled and broken or crushed; in high milling, cracked fragments of wheat larger than grits.
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