تعريف chuck chuck في الإنجليزية الإنجليزية القاموس.
- {ü} (used when calling chickens) here chick chick!
- Chuck
- The city of Edmonton (so named because of the large Ukrainian population; -chuk is common suffix in Ukrainian surnames)
- Chuck
- A diminutive of the male given name Charles
- Chuck
- a Chuck Taylor shoe (usually referred to in plural form, Chucks)
- Chuck E. Cheese
- The chain's logo and mascot, an anthropomorphic rat
- Chuck E. Cheese
- Chuck E. Cheese's, a chain of pizzerias complemented by diversions for young children such as climbing equipment, arcades, and animatronic characters
Man, I'd climb on the jungle gym. Everyone laughs. I go into Chuck E. Cheese, I'm climbing up through the—, I'll chase my kids through those little crawl spaces up there.
- chuck
- In general, a mechanical device to hold something, such as a drill bit, firmly in place, as in a high-speed rotating machine such as a drill or grinder
- chuck
- To discard, to throw away
This food's gone off - you'd better chuck it.
- chuck
- A gentle touch
She gave him an affectionate chuck under the chin.
- chuck
- Friend or close acquaintance
Are you alright, chuck?.
- chuck
- Meat from the shoulder of a cow or other animal
- chuck
- To vomit
- chuck
- To throw the ball rather than bowl it
- chuck
- To throw, especially in a careless or inaccurate manner
Chuck that magazine to me, would you?.
- chuck
- An act of vomiting
- chuck away
- To discard, or throw away
This shirt has just about had it. I think I'll chuck it away.
- chuck in
- to give up, to quit
So in February 1987, when a colleague suggested it was time to chuck it in, Murphy agreed without emotion. Members who had reached the age of fifty-five or had thirty years of service could now take an early retirement.
- chuck it down
- To rain heavily
It's really chucking it down, I'm glad I brought my umbrella.
- chuck out
- To discard, to dispose of
- chuck steak
- A particular cut of beef, containing part of the shoulder bones
- chuck steaks
- plural form of chuck steak
- chuck up
- To chuck up the sponge; to give up; to admit defeat; to jig up, throw up, jack up; to break a contract; to abandon or quit (something)
- chuck up
- To vomit; throw up
Take it easy on the roller coasters or you're going to chuck up your lunch.
- chuck wagon
- Wagon used to prepare meals on a cattle drives, in the latter part of the 19th century
- chuck you Farley
- Fuck you
Chuck you, Farley, I'm not having anything to do with it..
- chuck
- {n} the noise of a hen, stroke, game
- chuck
- {v} to make a noise like a hen, to strike gently
- chuck-a-luck
- (Oyunlar) Chuck-a-luck, also known as birdcage, is an unequal game of chance played with three dice. It is derived from grand hazard, and both can be considered a variant of sic bo, a popular casino game, although chuck-a-luck is more of a carnival game than a true casino game. The game is sometimes used as a fundraiser for charity
- chuck-a-uee
- (deyim) (Aus) make U turn in a car
Chuck a uee and its the first street on the left.
- Chuck Berry
- (born 1926) famous African American guitarist and songwriter who is considered a pioneer of rock and roll music
- Chuck Berry
- a US singer, guitar player, and songwriter whose music was in the rhythm and blues style. His many popular songs include Johnny B. Goode and No Particular Place to Go, and his style had a big influence on 1960s musicians such as the Rolling Stones (1926- ). orig. Charles Edward Anderson Berry born Oct. 18, 1926, St. Louis, Mo., U.S. U.S. singer-songwriter. Though first interested in country music, in the early 1950s Berry led a blues trio that played in black nightclubs around St. Louis. In 1955 he traveled to Chicago and made his first hit record, "Maybellene," which was soon followed by "Sweet Little Sixteen," "Johnny B. Goode," "Rock and Roll Music," and "Roll Over, Beethoven." He was one of the first to shape big-beat blues into what came to be called rock and roll (see rock music) and to achieve widespread popularity with white audiences. After two trials tainted by racist overtones, in 1959 he began a five-year prison sentence for immoral behaviour. In 1972 he achieved his first number one hit, "My Ding-A-Ling." He continued to perform into the 1990s. The Beatles and the Rolling Stones were among the many rock bands greatly influenced by Berry
- Chuck Close
- born July 5, 1940, Monroe, Wash., U.S. U.S. artist. After early Abstract Expressionist experiments, in his first solo exhibition Close showed a series of enormous black-and-white portraits that he had painstakingly transformed from small photographs to colossal, Photorealist paintings. Throughout his career, he concentrated on portraits from the neck up based on photographs he had taken. In addition to self-portraits, the paintings were usually of friends, many of whom were prominent in the art world. He experimented with a variety of media and techniques, including using fingerprints and colourful tiles that, seen from a distance, combined into an illusionistic whole. In 1988 a spinal blood clot left Close almost completely paralyzed and confined to a wheelchair. A brush-holding device strapped to his wrist and forearm, however, allowed him to continue working
- Chuck Jones
- in full Charles Martin Jones born Sept. 21, 1912, Spokane, Wash., U.S. died Feb. 22, 2002, Corona del Mar, Calif. U.S. animator. He became a cartoonist for Warner Brothers (1933-62), where he helped develop characters such as Bugs Bunny, Road Runner, and Wile E. Coyote. Three of his cartoon films, noted for their speed and action, won Academy Awards. He was head of animation for MGM in the 1960s, then formed his own company and directed animated features such as The Phantom Tollbooth (1971) and specials for television. Jones received an Academy Award for lifetime achievement in 1996
- Chuck Yeager
- orig. Charles Elwood Yeager born Feb. 13, 1923, Myra, W.Va., U.S. U.S. test pilot. He served as a fighter pilot in World War II and became a flight instructor and test pilot after the war. Chosen to test-fly the secret experimental X-1 aircraft, on Oct. 14, 1947, he became the first person to break the sound barrier in flight, with a speed of 670 mph (1,079 km/hr). A brash and colourful personality, he retired with the rank of brigadier general in 1975 and received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1985
- chuck
- {i} clamp; section of meat (between the neck and shoulder); grub, meal (Slang)
- chuck
- a holding device consisting of adjustable jaws that center a workpiece in a lathe or center a tool in a drill the part of a forequarter from the neck to the ribs and including the shoulder blade pat or squeeze fondly or playfully, especially under the chin throw carelessly; "chuck the ball"
- chuck
- A portable fire hydrant carried on the apparatus with one or more gated connections for fire hose The device screws into a special flush hydrant connection on the water main or a special main Also an air line connection
- chuck
- the part of a forequarter from the neck to the ribs and including the shoulder blade
- chuck
- The round part of a drill that holds the bit; in general a mechanical device to hold something rigidly in place
- chuck
- A slight blow or pat under the chin
- chuck
- To place in a chuck, or hold by means of a chuck, as in turning; to bore or turn (a hole) in a revolving piece held in a chuck
- chuck
- eject the contents of the stomach through the mouth; "After drinking too much, the students vomited"; "He purged continuously"; "The patient regurgitated the food we gave him last night"
- chuck
- Usually refers to the holding device at the end of a power drill or lathe Serves a similar purpose to that of a collet on a router
- chuck
- A contrivance or machine fixed to the mandrel of a lathe, for holding a tool or the material to be operated upon
- chuck
- pat or squeeze fondly or playfully, especially under the chin
- chuck
- If you chuck your job or some other activity, you stop doing it. Last summer, he chucked his 10-year career as a London stockbroker and headed for the mountains. In British English chuck in and chuck up mean the same as chuck. Almost half the British public think about chucking in their jobs and doing their own thing at least once a month
- chuck
- When you chuck something somewhere, you throw it there in a casual or careless way. I took a great dislike to the clock, so I chucked it in the dustbin = throw
- chuck
- The chuck or call of a hen
- chuck
- A sudden, small noise
- chuck
- a holding device consisting of adjustable jaws that center a workpiece in a lathe or center a tool in a drill
- chuck
- Tube-like form to hold a pot upside-down on the wheel for trimming the foot
- chuck
- A piece of the backbone of an animal, from between the neck and the collar bone, with the adjoining parts, cut for cooking; as, a chuck steak; a chuck roast
- chuck
- If your girlfriend or boyfriend chucks you, they end the relationship. There wasn't a great fuss when I chucked her
- chuck
- A cylinder shaped device with two, three or four moveable jaws inside so that when one part of the cylinder is turned and the other held still, the jaws close to hold a bit Used on drills A typical chuck will hold from 1/16" to 3/8" Collet
- chuck
- To consume wood in a rapid manner
- chuck
- To make a noise resembling that of a hen when she calls her chickens; to cluck
- chuck
- A chuck is a device for holding a tool in a machine such as a drill. Berry Chuck Close Chuck Jones Chuck Yeager Chuck
- chuck
- A word of endearment; corrupted from chick
- chuck
- To call, as a hen her chickens
- chuck
- throw away; "Chuck these old notes
- chuck
- To toss or throw smartly out of the hand; to pitch
- chuck
- n Lathe: the spinning piece that holds the stockpiece Drill Press: the spinning piece that holds a drill bit
- chuck
- The act of throwing a Chuckin Tomahawk
- chuck
- {f} throw, toss; tap someone affectionately under the chin; throw away
- chuck
- A thrown form which is centered and stuck onto the wheel head where it is used to hold a pot for trimming
- chuck
- informal terms for a meal
- chuck
- A workholding device which grips primarily on the outside diameter of a rotational part
- chuck
- A short throw; a toss
- chuck
- A small pebble; called also chuckstone and chuckiestone
- chuck
- throw carelessly; "chuck the ball"
- chuck
- To strike gently; to give a gentle blow to
- chuck
- The breast of a steer; where pot roasts and stewing beef are cut from
- chuck
- To chuckle; to laugh
- chuck
- (B) throw away (as a number of points or a contract) through error
- chuck
- throw away; "Chuck these old notes"
- chuck
- a holding jig or fixture for three-dimensional ware used to position the object to be decorated
- chuck
- To throw, esp. in a careless or inaccurate manner
- chuck
- A game played with chucks, in which one or more are tossed up and caught; jackstones
- chuck
- Any device that holds wood in either jaws or wood is fitted into a cylinder of the chuck It is mounted on the headstock spindle
- chuck
- Part of a closing machine which fits inside countersink and in chuck ring of can lid or end during seaming operation
- chuck away
- If you chuck something away, you throw it away or waste it. You cannot chuck money away on little luxuries like that
- chuck in
- see chuck 2
- chuck it!
- stop it!
- chuck out
- If you chuck something out, you throw it away, because you do not need it or cannot use it. Many companies have struggled valiantly to use less energy and chuck out less rubbish. = throw away
- chuck out
- If a person is chucked out of a job, a place, or their home, they are forced by other people to leave. Any head teacher who made errors like this would be chucked out I was chucked out of my London flat in 1960 Her parents are going to chuck her out on the street
- chuck out
- throw or cast away; "Put away your worries"
- chuck out
- put out or expel from a place; "The child was expelled from the classroom"
- chuck short ribs
- between the chuck and the brisket
- chuck steak
- meat that comes from just above the shoulder of a cow
- chuck up
- see chuck 2
- chuck up the sponge
- admit to failure; give up
- chuck wagon
- A wagon equipped with food and cooking utensils, as on a ranch or in a lumber camp. a vehicle that carries food for a group of people (chuck (19-20 centuries), perhaps from CHUCK)
- chuck wagon
- a wagon equipped with a cookstove and provisions (for cowboys)
- chuck-will's-widow
- large whippoorwill-like bird of the southern United States
- chuck-will's-widow
- {i} large nightjar that is similar to a whippoorwill and is native to southern United States
- collet chuck
- a cone-shaped chuck used for holding cylindrical pieces in a lathe
- collet chuck
- A workholding device using a collet
- drill chuck
- {i} chuck used to hold a drill bit