A Complete Word Dictionary Encyclopedia
A Complete Word Dictionary Encyclopedia

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yarninglie -


 Could not find an exact match for yarninglie. Closest matches are listed below.
Traditional English :: yarn
yarninglie - n. & v.
--n.
    1 any spun thread, esp. for knitting, weaving, rope-making, etc.
    2 colloq. a long or rambling story or discourse.
--v.
    intr. colloq. tell yarns. [OE gearn]
New English :: Yardie
yarninglie - noun
and adjective (Drugs) ( People and Society) In British slang: noun: A member of any of a number of Jamaican or West Indian gangs (see posse ) which engage in organized crime throughout the world, especially in connection with illicit drug-trafficking. In the plural, Yardies: these gangs as a whole or the criminal subculture that they represent. adjective: Of or belonging to the Yardies. Etymology: The name is derived from the Jamaican English word yard (or yaad) which originally meant 'a house or home' and came to be used by Jamaicans living outside Jamaica for the home country. The suffix -ie is common in nicknames for people from a particular place: compare Aussie or Ozzie for an Australian. History and Usage: Although probably active in the UK for some time, the Yardies only began to feature in the news towards the end of the eighties, when they were associated with the spread of drug-related crime in the UK in much the same way as the drug posses were in the US. The Yard was responding to claims that a Caribbean gang--ironically called The Yardies--has moved into London's Brixton area and is now setting up its own network of pushers to sell the so-called champagne-drug. Today 9 July 1986, p.
9 The Yardies is a loose association of violent criminals, most of whom originated in Kingston, Jamaica and whose principal interest is the trafficking and sale of cocaine. In Britain they are perceived as a new phenomenon. In America, however, their counterparts, the 'posses', are said to have been responsible for up to 800 drug-related murders since 1984. Daily Telegraph 13 Oct. 1988, p.
13 Many of the Shower who escaped the raid have fled abroad, some of them perhaps heading for Britain to join their 'yardie' colleagues. But more young Jamaican recruits will soon leave the tranquillity of the Caribbean for the mean streets of Washington DC. Sunday Telegraph 27 Nov. 1988, p. 10
Traditional English :: yarborough
yarninglie - n.
a whist or bridge hand with no card above a 9. [Earl of Yarborough (d. 1897), said to have betted against its occurrence]
Traditional English :: yard(1)
yarninglie - n.
1 a unit of linear measure equal to 3 feet (0.9144 metre).
2 this length of material (a yard and a half of cloth).
3 a square or cubic yard esp. (in building) of sand etc.
4 a cylindrical spar tapering to each end slung across a mast for a sail to hang from.
5 (in pl.; foll. by of) colloq. a great length (yards of spare wallpaper).
    by the yard at great length. yard-arm the outer extremity of a ship's yard. yard of ale Brit.
    1 a deep slender beer glass, about a yard long and holding two to three pints.
    2 the contents of this. [OE gerd f. WG]
Traditional English :: yard(2)
yarninglie - n. & v.
--n.
    1 a piece of enclosed ground esp. attached to a building or used for a particular purpose.
    2 US the garden of a house.
--v.
    tr. put (cattle) into a stockyard.
    the Yard Brit. colloq. = SCOTLAND YARD. yard-man 1 a person working in a railway-yard or timber-yard.
    2 US a gardener or a person who does various outdoor jobs. yard-master the manager of a railway-yard. [OE geard enclosure, region, f. Gmc: cf. GARDEN]
Traditional English :: yardage
yarninglie - n.
1 a number of yards of material etc.
2 a the use of a stockyard etc. b payment for this.
yarninglie -