What is the meaning of TOOTSIE ROLLS. Phrases containing TOOTSIE ROLLS
See meanings and uses of TOOTSIE ROLLS!Slangs & AI meanings
or tootsy n 1. Toots. 2. A girl or young woman. 3. A person's foot.
Bootsie and Snudge was 's London Cockney rhyming slang for a judge.
Tottie is British slang for sexually alluring people, potential sexual partners.
From the pop band of the 1980's Hootie and the Blowfish. The lead singer was black (obviously Hootie). The other members of the band were white (Blowfish).
Black children. Tootsie rolls are small and brown.
Bootie is British slang for a Royal Marine.
Rootin' tootin' is American slang for lively, noisy, boisterous, rip−roaring.
adj./adv. Something undesirable. An inopportune or unfair situation, event, or thing. "Man, that teacher is bootsie" "Did you see his pants? Bootsie!"Â
Totsie is British slang for a girl.
Play footsie is slang for to indulge in amorous or flirtatious caresses with the feet. Play footsie is slang for to flirt with.
Tootin' is American slang for absolutely.
Refers to their dootie-brown skin.
Tootsies is slang for toes.
n. someone's posterior. 2. see "bootsie." Lyrical reference: GERI HALLIWELL LYRICS "Shake your bootie cutie calling feels like sex..."Â
Cootie is American and Australian slang for the body louse. Cootie is American slang for an imaginary germ or bug.Cootie is American slang for something repellent but contagious that can be caught from someone one doesn't like. Cootie is American slang for a piece of nasal mucus.
Tootsie roll is American slang for a form of dark coloured heroin from Mexico.
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n.
One who toots; one who plays upon a pipe or horn.
n.
ANy insect whose larva rolls up leaves; a leaf roller. see Tortrix.
v. i.
To make a loud or heavy rumbling noise; as, the thunder rolls.
n.
The larva of any one of several species of lepidopterous insects which feed upon the leaves, buds, or blossoms of the rose, especially Cacaecia rosaceana, which rolls up the leaves for a nest, and devours both the leaves and buds.
n.
One who, or that which, rolls; especially, a cylinder, sometimes grooved, of wood, stone, metal, etc., used in husbandry and the arts.
v.
One of a set of revolving cylinders, or rollers, between which metal is pressed, formed, or smoothed, as in a rolling mill; as, to pass rails through the rolls.
v. i.
To fall or tumble; -- with over; as, a stream rolls over a precipice.
v. i.
To move on wheels; as, the carriage rolls along the street.
v. i.
To be wound or formed into a cylinder or ball; as, the cloth rolls unevenly; the snow rolls well.
n.
To drive or impel forward with an easy motion, as of rolling; as, a river rolls its waters to the ocean.
n. pl.
Small rolls of dough, baked, cut in halves, and then browned in an oven, -- used as food for infants.
n.
Any one of numerous species of scaraboid beetles belonging to Scarabaeus, Copris, Phanaeus, and allied genera. The female lays her eggs in a globular mass of dung which she rolls by means of her hind legs to a burrow excavated in the earth in which she buries it.
n.
the curve traced by any point in the plane of a given curve when the latter rolls, without sliding, over another fixed curve. See Cycloid, and Epycycloid.
v. i.
To spread under a roller or rolling-pin; as, the paste rolls well.
n.
A curve traced by a point in the circumference of a circle which rolls on the concave side in the fixed circle. Cf. Epicycloid, and Trochoid.
n.
A curve, traced by a point in the radius, or radius produced, of a circle which rolls upon the concave side of a fixed circle. See Hypocycloid, Epicycloid, and Trochoid.
v. i.
To move, as a curved object may, along a surface by rotation without sliding; to revolve upon an axis; to turn over and over; as, a ball or wheel rolls on the earth; a body rolls on an inclined plane.
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.
That which rolls; a roller.
v. i.
To turn over, or from side to side, while lying down; to wallow; as, a horse rolls.
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