
However, I am told by my daughters that this David Tennant chap is rather good, and as one of them is studying Hamlet at school I conquered my fear of hubris about the future and my aversion to Barty Crouch, Jr, and booked the darn things. If I Could Have a Conversation about It: Decline and Fall « UnknowingĪfter listening to a video in which a narrow, scholarly conclusion was advocated as a universal key to Scripture, I suggested to the Colombians watching it with me that the learned chap from the Infallible USA was actually not saying anything very meaningful or useful. McNulty Escapes With ‘A Talking To’ Shock! « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOGĪnd then you hear the chap is no longer with us, as if the foreground were a busy harbor and out at sea a ship was foundering, comically unattended as it sunk and perished forever. I don ` t know who the chap is doing the review of MP ` s expenses, or what his instructions have been, but I don ` t like it. I wouldn't know if this chap is a waste of space or not N but I do agree with saving the rainforests.
#Crack open a cold one meaning crack#
noun a crack in a lip caused usually by cold.noun a long narrow depression in a surface.noun (usually in the plural) leather leggings without a seat joined by a belt often have flared outer flaps worn over trousers by cowboys to protect their legs.verb intransitive Of the skin, to split or flake due to cold weather or dryness.įrom WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University.noun archaic The jaw (often in plural).noun UK, dialectal A customer, a buyer.A man or boy a youth a fellow.įrom Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

#Crack open a cold one meaning skin#
transitive verb To cause to open in slits or chinks to split to cause the skin of to crack or become rough.noun One of the jaws or cheeks of a vise, etc.noun One of the jaws or the fleshy covering of a jaw - commonly in the plural, and used of animals, and colloquially of human beings.intransitive verb To crack or open in slits.noun A fellow a man or a boy: used familiarly, like fellow, and usually with a qualifying adjective, old, young, little, poor, etc., and loosely, much as the word fellow is.įrom the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.noun plural The mouth or entrance of a channel: as, the chops of the English channel.noun The upper or lower part of the mouth the jaw: commonly in the plural.



From The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
