What is the meaning of ROLLING. Phrases containing ROLLING
See meanings and uses of ROLLING!Slangs & AI meanings
MDMA
Marijuana; LSD; marijuana rolling papers
Rolling is slang for very wealthy.Rolling is slang for swaying or staggering.Rolling is British slang for wealthy.Rolling is British slang for very drunk, intoxicated.
Rolling marijuana and cocaine into a single joint
verb. Feeling the effects of MDMA (E, X, Ecstacy). Example: Damn, you are rolling your brains out!
Rolling billow is London Cockney rhyming slang for pillow.
Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA)
Feeling the effects of MDMA or LSD, so that it is visible to others. "You're rolling face!"
Get the ball rolling is slang for to begin.
Rolling stone is London Cockney rhyming slang for bone.
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n.
A place prepared for rolling logs into a stream.
a.
Easily rolling or turning; easily set in motion; apt to roll; rotating; as, voluble particles of matter.
a.
Rising and falling like waves; resembling wave form or motion; undulatory; rolling; wavy; as, an undulating medium; undulating ground.
v. i.
A motion as of something moving upon little wheels or rollers; a rolling motion.
n.
A game in which a ball, rolling into a certain place, wins.
a.
Having gradual, rounded undulations of surface; as, a rolling country; rolling land.
a.
Moving on wheels or rollers, or as if on wheels or rollers; as, a rolling chair.
n.
A kind of rolling walk.
n.
Act of tumbling, or rolling over; a fall.
v. i.
To move in a rolling, cumbersome manner; to waddle.
n.
that which gives a rotary or rolling motion, as a muscle which partially rotates or turns some part on its axis.
a.
Rotating on an axis, or moving along a surface by rotation; turning over and over as if on an axis or a pivot; as, a rolling wheel or ball.
n.
A rolling, marshy, mossy plain of Northern Siberia.
n.
The arrangement of the leaves within the leaf bud, as regards their folding, coiling, rolling, etc.; prefoliation.
n.
Any plant which habitually breaks away from its roots in the autumn, and is driven by the wind, as a light, rolling mass, over the fields and prairies; as witch grass, wild indigo, Amarantus albus, etc.
n.
A quick, rolling movement; a gallop.
n.
The curve described by any point in a wheel rolling on a line; a cycloid; a roulette; in general, the curve described by any point fixedly connected with a moving curve while the moving curve rolls without slipping on a second fixed curve, the curves all being in one plane. Cycloids, epicycloids, hypocycloids, cardioids, etc., are all trochoids.
v. i.
To boil with a continued bubbling or heaving and rolling, with noise.
n.
A genus of minute, pale-green, globular, organisms, about one fiftieth of an inch in diameter, found rolling through water, the motion being produced by minute colorless cilia. It has been considered as belonging to the flagellate Infusoria, but is now referred to the vegetable kingdom, and each globule is considered a colony of many individuals. The commonest species is Volvox globator, often called globe animalcule.
n.
A rolling of a body; a wallowing.
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