Lay a batch


verb phrase

To leave black rubber marks on the road by accelerating a car rapidly (1940s+ Teenagers)

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  • Layabout

    [ley-uh-bout] /ˈleɪ əˌbaʊt/ noun, Chiefly British. 1. a lazy or idle person; loafer. /ˈleɪəˌbaʊt/ noun 1. a lazy person; loafer verb 2. (preposition, usually intransitive or reflexive) (old-fashioned) to hit out with violent and repeated blows in all directions n. “habitual loafer,” 1932, from lay (v.) + about. One who “lays about” the house, etc. […]

  • Lay a fart

    verb phrase (Variations: cut or let or rip may replace lay) To flatulate; fart: This guy laid this terrific fart (1940s+)

  • Lay a finger on

    Also, put a finger on. Barely touch, as in You’d better not lay a finger on those documents! or If you lay a finger on me, I’ll sue. This expression is nearly always used as a prohibition. [ Mid-1800s ] Also see: put one’s finger on

  • Lay a glove on someone

    Related Terms not lay a glove on someone

  • Layamon

    [ley-uh-muh n, lah-yuh-] /ˈleɪ ə mən, ˈlɑ yə-/ noun 1. flourished c1200, English poet and chronicler. /ˈlaɪəmən/ noun 1. 12th-century English poet and priest; author of the Brut, a chronicle providing the earliest version of the Arthurian story in English


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