grass

  • 61grass — See: LET GRASS GROW UNDER ONE S FEET, SNAKE IN THE GRASS …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 62Grass — This interesting name has to be described as European . It is is recorded in much the same spelling in the British Isles as Grass, in Germany as Gras, Grass, Grasse, Grassmann, Graser, in France as de Grasse, de Gras, Le Gras, Gras, and… …

    Surnames reference

  • 63grass — See: let grass grow under one s feet, snake in the grass …

    Словарь американских идиом

  • 64grass — Noun. 1. An informer. Possibly from the rhyming slang grass in the park    nark , meaning informer. E.g. Don t tell John about this, he s a grass and I don t want to get into trouble. 2. Marijuana. Verb. To inform (on), betray …

    English slang and colloquialisms

  • 65grass — veja statusas T sritis ekologija ir aplinkotyra apibrėžtis Reguliariai žemai pjaunama varpinių žolių pievelė. atitikmenys: angl. grass; grass plot; lawn; sward vok. Rasen, m rus. газон, m; мурава, f; трава, f …

    Ekologijos terminų aiškinamasis žodynas

  • 66grass — [OE] Reflecting its status as the commonest and most obvious of plants (and, for agricultural communities, the most important), grass etymologically simply means ‘that which grows’. It comes from *grō , *gra , the prehistoric Germanic base which… …

    Word origins

  • 67Grass — 1. Gras. 2. Übernamen zu mhd. graz, graz »wütend, zornig«. Bekannter Namensträger: Günter Grass, deutscher Schriftsteller (20./21.Jh.) …

    Wörterbuch der deutschen familiennamen

  • 68grass — ray grass …

    Dictionnaire des rimes

  • 69grass up — see grass 4) …

    English dictionary

  • 70grass — • to expose someone to the police, an informer. To grass someone up is to tell on them . Also a slang term for marijuana leaf that is smoked …

    Londonisms dictionary