What is the meaning of PINS. Phrases containing PINS
See meanings and uses of PINS!Slangs & AI meanings
Pins is slang for the legs.
Missed the point, not understood. This referenced missing all nine pins in bowling. (Yes, there was bowling during Old West times.)
n legs. Always used in the complementary phrase “nice pins!”. You would never hear “my grandmother fell the other day and broke both her pins”.
Be careful around stacks of ties, rails, etc.
Drumsticks, pins, pillars, stems, uprights, get away sticks, gams
Legs
Rin−Tin−Tins is London Cockney rhyming slang for legs (pins).
Noun. A leg. Usually plural. E.g."That Brazilian model has got a fine pair of pins."
Needles and pins is London Cockney rhyming slang for twins.
Short movable bars of iron or hard wood to which running rigging may be secured, or belayed.
Metal Y shaped pins to hold oars whilst rowing.
Legs (especially a woman’s)
n Bobby pin. The little pins you poke in your hair to keep it in place.
Switchman, so named from the large serpentine letter S on membership pins of the Switchman's Union of North America. Sometimes called reptile or serpent
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n.
A small cushion, in which pins may be stuck for use.
n.
One of the pins used for marking points on a cribbage board.
n.
The leg; as, to knock one off his pins.
n.
One who pins or impounds cattle. See Pin, v. t.
n. pl.
A game played with nine pins, or pieces of wood, set on end, at which a wooden ball is bowled to knock them down; bowling.
n.
A horizontal bar on a stake, used for supporting the yarns which are kept apart by pins in the bar.
n.
A knocking down of all ten pins at one delivery of the ball.
n.
One of the pins of a musical instrument, on which the strings are strained.
n.
One of the radial handles projecting from the rim of a steering wheel; also, one of the pins or trundles of a lantern wheel.
v. t.
An English game resembling ninepins, but played by throwing wooden disks, instead of rolling balls, at the pins.
n.
A contrivance or arrangement serving as a fulcrum for an oar in rowing. It consists sometimes of a notch in the gunwale of a boat, sometimes of a pair of pins between which the oar rests on the edge of the gunwale, sometimes of a single pin passing through the oar, or of a metal fork or stirrup pivoted in the gunwale and suporting the oar.
n.
One of the pins or trundles of a lantern wheel.
n.
The right of bowling again at a full set of pins, after having knocked all the pins down in less than three bowls. If all the pins are knocked down in one bowl it is a double spare; in two bowls, a single spare.
n.
A game resembling ninepins, but played with ten pins. See Ninepins.
n.
A board having a row of pins, set zigzag, between which wire is drawn to straighten it.
n.
An instrument for drawing ellipses, one part of which consists of a cross with two grooves at right angles to each other, the other being a beam carrying two pins (which slide in those grooves), and also the describing pencil.
n.
A child's game played with pins.
n.
One who, or that which, pins or fastens, as with pins.
v. t.
To loose from pins; to remove the pins from; to unfasten; as, to unpin a frock; to unpin a frame.
n.
A small lathe for turning wooden pins.
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