A chickenhawk or chicken hawk is slang used in American and British gay culture to denote older males who prefer younger males for partners, who may less often be called "chickens", i.e., the prey of the chickenhawk. Other variations include chicken queen and chicken plucker.
: timid, cowardly. slang. : insistent on petty details of duty or discipline. : petty, unimportant.
In gay slang, queen is a term used to refer to a flamboyant or effeminate gay man. The term can either be pejorative or celebrated as a type of self-identification.
any boy under the age of consent, heterosexual, fair of face, and unfamiliar with homosexuality ("So many chickens were flapping around that I thought we were touring Colonel Sanders' plantation”) 2. juvenile, youthful, young-looking." Others have defined it as a young man who engages in sex for money or favors.
For the uninitiated: “Chicken” means money. “Sahab” is slang term for friend.
"C-note" is a slang term for a $100 banknote in U.S. currency. The "C" in C-note refers to the Roman numeral for 100, which was printed on $100 bills, and it can also refer to a century. The term came to prominence in the 1920s and 1930s, and it was popularized in a number of gangster films.
In slang, a thousand dollars may also be referred to as a "grand" or "G", "K" (as in kilo), or less commonly a "stack", a "bozo", as well as a "band" . For example, "The repairs to my car cost me a couple grand" or "The repairs to my car cost me a couple [of] stacks".
As the name suggests, a Chicken Lady is a woman who loves and is committed to the safety, welfare and happiness of her flock.
a person who constantly warns that a calamity is imminent; a vociferous pessimist: The Chicken Littles are warning that the stock market will collapse.
Chickenhead is an American English slang term that is typically used in a derogatory manner toward women. The term mocks the motion of the head while performing oral sex on a man, but contains social characteristics and cultural relevance as well, and is frequently heard in popular hip hop music.
Camilla proclaimed herself a “Tinder Queen.” She hadn't always felt respected on dates she met offline, but on Tinder she feels in control. She works at creating a glamorous persona and regularly curates the Facebook photos and interests that show up on her Tinder profile.
: a woman who dominates or leads a group (as in a social activity)
A queen is a woman who is living the best version of herself. A queen is someone who has fully found herself and embraced it. She speaks to herself and others with kindness and love. A queen has shed all her self-limiting beliefs and she's completely free of any mind drama.
chook. A domestic fowl; a chicken. Chook comes from British dialect chuck(y) 'a chicken; a fowl' which is a variant of chick. Chook is the common term for the live bird, although chook raffles, held in Australian clubs and pubs, have ready-to-cook chooks as prizes.
If someone calls you a chicken, they mean that you are a coward or afraid to do something.
The word chicken is often used to describe someone who is scared (fearful) of something. For example if you and your friends had decided to go bungy jumping and one the day one of your friends pulled out of the arrangement, or did not jump, the others might call him 'chicken'.
a prostitute who attracts customers by walking the streets. synonyms: floozie, floozy, hooker, hustler, slattern, streetwalker.
A weak-willed person.
(figuratively) A powerful, prideful, or pompous person.
Generally it means small and cute. So it's an endearment much like 'honey', 'dear', 'darling' etc…but unlike the others it is used for women, either by their spouses or by family members.
noun. Also called: chookie Australian informal a hen or chicken. Australian informal a woman, esp a more mature one.
A 'chicken' is another word for a kilo of cocaine. In some cities the word is reserved specifically for a kilo of crack and a 'bird' would be used for a kilo of raw powder cocaine.
Australia's colourful bank notes are known by many colloquial names. The twenty-dollar note is referred to as a lobster, while the fifty-dollar note is called a pineapple, and don't we all want to get our hands on a few jolly green giants, that is, hundred-dollar notes?
Where do the terms 'monkey' and 'pony' come from? Whilst this is not cemented in fact, the widely held belief is that the terms came from soldiers returning to Britain from India. Old Indian rupee banknotes had animals on them and it is said that the 500 rupee note had a monkey on it and the 25 rupee featured a pony.
The British empire's control of India led to a number of phrases making their way across from the Raj to our shores, with a 'monkey' perhaps the most famous. Referring to £500, this term is derived from the Indian 500 Rupee note of that era, which featured a monkey on one side.