noun A long, stout, coarse hemp, rather foul, used for making inferior rope.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
verb Present participle of chuck.
Etymologies
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Examples
For a memo from Jonathan Lindley, director of what is laughingly called “enforcement” at BIA reveals that the BIA have no real interest in chucking these people out if they are caught:
For a memo from Jonathan Lindley, director of what is laughingly called “enforcement” at BIA reveals that the BIA have no real interest in chucking these people out if they are caught:
I am a huge fan of Rob Horne but am still concerned he is pretty under done with not much footy this year, it would be a big call chucking into a QF or SF to run on.
I am all for the idea of chucking every fcuktard we can find in the Channel tunnel, then blowing it at our end therefore giving all lower echelons of life to France and, double whammy, we also cut all ties with France.
I am all for the idea of chucking every fcuktard we can find in the Channel tunnel, then blowing it at our end therefore giving all lower echelons of life to France and, double whammy, we also cut all ties with France.
I am all for the idea of chucking every fcuktard we can find in the Channel tunnel, then blowing it at our end therefore giving all lower echelons of life to France and, double whammy, we also cut all ties with France.
Bowlers in cricket aren't allowed to straighten their bowling arm during delivery; doing so constitutes throwing (known in cricket as "chucking") and is cricket's No. 1 no-no.
You said you secured the change not because you were angry for Carey "chucking" you but because it made more sense to name it after Teddy Roosevelt because basically there aren't monuments or buildings named after him in NY.
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