retail eavesdropping n.— «Some might picture an agent climbing a telephone pole and attaching a wire to a telephone line, but such a technique, called retail eavesdropping, is only useful for going after one phone line at a time...
cheese curtain
n.— «He’s done it! Julian has moved behind the cheese curtain.» —“Re: Rock ‘n Roll for geezers” by Bob Christ Usenet: alt.tasteless Jan. 14, 1994. (source: Double-Tongued Dictionary)
oil-spot v.— «Chris makes sure everyone is onboard and says to John, our driver, “We’re a bus,” which means, everyone’s on, let’s go.…Failing to leave a sign of your temporary absence puts you at risk of being “oil...
milkshake v.— «“Hook me up to a lie detector, I swear to God, no one in this barn or me milkshaked that 50-1 shot who ran last,” O’Neill said, referring to the term for an illegal mixture said to reduce fatigue in horses...
yowie n.— «It was a dress up as what you wanted to be when you were a child affair. So I dressed up as a soldier as you can see in the photos. I wore my yowie hat, youwie shirt, new army pants and my army boots.» —“my...
Injun bank roll n.— «The dollars he pulled out of his pocket never seemed to diminish what he called his “Injun bank roll,” with its few big bills on the top bolstered by many smaller ones beneath.» —“Injun Joe...