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go down "

Results retrieved for:
    • \ ˈgō-ˌdau̇n 

    • \ ˈī(-ə)l 

    • \ bə-ˈlün \

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    [Noun]  | "go*down" | \ ˈgō-ˌdau̇n \


    1: a warehouse in a country of southern or eastern Asia


    Origin: 1552 ;

     By folk etymology from Malay gudang;

    [Noun]  | "aisle" | \ ˈī(-ə)l \


    1: a passage (as in a theater or railroad passenger car) separating sections of seats

    2: such a passage regarded as separating opposing parties in a legislature

    3: a passage (as in a store or warehouse) for inside traffic


    Origin: 15th century ;

     Middle English ele, eill, ile, ilde "lateral division of a church on either side of the nave, usually divided from the nave by pillars," borrowed from Anglo-French ele, esle, aile, ile "wing, wing of a building, lateral division of a nave" (continental Old French ele "wing, wing of a building"), going back to Latin āla "wing" ;

      * Note : The Middle English forms ile, ilde show assimilation to ile, ilde "island" (see: {isle:1|isle:1})—the rows on either side of the nave perhaps being thought of as isolated from the rest of the church—and effectively supplant ele, eill, etc. in the sixteenth century. The in ilde is a secondary extrusion (compare {mold:3|mold:3}). In early Modern English ile competes orthographically with a variety of other spellings, as ayle/aile, which appears to have regressed to the sense "wing" and adopted the Middle French spelling aile, an etymologizing variant of earlier ele; and isle, which copies the spelling of {isle:1|isle:1}. The now standard spelling aisle looks like a merger of aile and isle. Samuel Johnson enters aisle in his dictionary (1755) with some reluctance: "Thus the word is written by [Joseph] Addison, but perhaps improperly; since it see:ms deducible only from either aile, a wing, or allée, a path; and is therefore to be written aile." As Johnson was likely aware, aisle had developed a broadened sense "passage between pews in the middle of a church" that copies a now out-of-use sense of {alley:1|alley:1}. The still broader extensions "passage between seats in a train, bus or airplane" and "space between rows of items in a department store or supermarket" first appeared in American English.;

    [Noun]  | "bal*loon" | \ bə-ˈlün \


    1: a nonporous bag of light material that can be inflated especially with air or gas: such as

    2: a bag that is filled with heated air or a gas lighter than air so as to rise and float in the atmosphere and that usually carries a suspended load (such as a gondola with passengers)

    3: an inflatable bag (as of rubber or plastic) usually used as a toy or for decoration


    Origin: 1783 ;

     French ballon large football, balloon, from Italian dialect ballone large football, augmentative of balla ball, of Germanic origin; akin to Old High German balla ball {mat|ball|};

    [Verb]  | "go down" 


    1: to go below the horizon : set

    2: to fall to or as if to the ground

    3: to become submerged : sink


    Origin: 14th century ;

    [Idiom]  | "go down in history" 


    1: to be remembered as a very important person or event

    [Idiom]  | "go down the tubes" 


    1: to fail or become ruined

    2: to be wasted or lost

    [Idiom]  | "go down to defeat" 


    1: to fail or lose : to be defeated

    [Idiom]  | "go down with" 


    1: to begin to have or suffer from (an illness)

    [Idiom]  | "go down/like a bomb" 


    1: to be a success

    [Verb]  | "go down" 


    1: to take place;


      * e.g., " ... when's the drug deal supposed to go down? "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    [Verb]  | "go down (with)" 


    1: to become affected with (a disease or disorder);


      * e.g., " ... across the United Kingdom a number of children have gone down with chicken pox this week "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





     [ "go down" ]

    1: slang for having oral sex. used when making out, a guy/girl will say, "go down for me" instead of 'gimme head bitch'.

      * e.g.,  ... so did u go down on him? 

     [ "go down" ]

    1: What an elevator does when you push a button for a floor that's below the floor you're currently at.

      * e.g.,  ... "No baby, we're at floor 69. We gotta go down." 

     [ "go down" ]

    1:  To perform oral sex. To happen. Once an event has taken place, it can be said to have "gone down."

      * e.g.,  ...  Brad: I hooked up with Katy last night. Craig: Nice bro! Did she go down on you? Kelly: Hey how was your weekend? Katy: You'll never guess what went down on Friday! 

     [ "go down" ]

    1: to happen;

      * e.g.,  ... "Here's how it's gwon go down..." 


     [ "go down" ]

    2: If something happened, it went down.

      * e.g.,  ... "The whole thing went down in 1986..." 

     [ "go down" ]

    1: to suck a guys dick or to lick her pussy

      * e.g.,  ... go down on me 

     [ "go down" ]

    1: oral sex

      * e.g.,  ... Can I go down? 

     [ "go down" ]

    1: What playground slides like to say in their playground slide written language when they wish to entice children to play. Often, they must pass through twenty seven gates of hell to win person talking-to privileges. Once they talk to a person, he or she will write go down on me, on it's supple yellow plastic. The douchetard playground douches will erase it while jacking off to their own fucking awesomeness.

      * e.g.,  ... Go down on me, said the slide as it's supple yellow body flexed in the oncoming wind. 

     [ "going down" ]

    1: the act of eating someone out or giving someone head.

      * e.g.,  ... "Dude, I was going down on my girl today..." 

     [ "go down on" ]

    1: To give oral sex to someone.

      * e.g.,  ... He went down on me in the shower yesterday. That was some quality shower head! 

     [ "Going down" ]

    1: The various acts you want to do to your girl

      * e.g.,  ... Oh, what I would give to go down on Johanna 

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