bill

  • 91Bill — noun (the Bill or the Old Bill) [treated as sing. or plural] Brit. informal the police. Origin 1960s: familiar form of the given name William …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 92bill — I. n. 1. Beak, mandible, neb. 2. Bill hook, hedge bill, hedging knife, brush cutter. 3. Account, charges, reckoning, score. 4. Statement of particulars. 5. Draft of a law, projected law. 6. Note, note of hand, promissory note, evidence of debt, I …

    New dictionary of synonyms

  • 93bill as — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms bill as : present tense I/you/we/they bill as he/she/it bills as present participle billing as past tense billed as past participle billed as be billed as something to advertise or describe someone or… …

    English dictionary

  • 94Bill — /bɪl/ (say bil) noun the, British Colloquial the police. Also, the Old Bill. {origin uncertain; perhaps a personification of the Old Bailey as Bill Bailey} …

  • 95Bill 88 — DescriptionOn the 17 July, 1981, the Legislative Assembly adopted the law, with consists of three articles. For the first time, the statutory equality of the Acadians as a linguistic community, and urges the provincial government to protect and… …

    Wikipedia

  • 96Bill — englische Kurzform. Namensträger: Bill Clinton, US amerikanischer Präsident …

    Deutsch namen

  • 97bill — n ( es/ ) bill, chopper, battle axe, falchion, sword …

    Old to modern English dictionary

  • 98Bill — Refering to any member of the male gender. Hey Bill, come here …

    Dictionary of american slang

  • 99Bill — Refering to any member of the male gender. Hey Bill, come here …

    Dictionary of american slang

  • 100bill — I. n British 1. a £100 note or an amount of one hundred pounds. An item of black street talk used especially by males, recorded in 2003. ► I gave him two bills to take care of it. 2. the penis. The word was used in this sense by adolescent males… …

    Contemporary slang