Yes, I have heard this expression from native Englishmen a few times: "She's well stacked!" I know that they mean she has big ***, but stacked?
I thought that the word "stacked" meant piled up vertically. For example, "stacked antennas" are one above the other on the same mast. Surely, the correct word should be "bayed"? "Bayed antennas" are mounted side-by-side on a boom. So, should that girl be "well stacked" or "well bayed"?
BR MOTU
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" I know that they mean ... "Bayed antennas" are mounted side-by-side on a boom. So, should that girl be "well stacked" or "well bayed"?
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" I know that they mean ...
"Bayed antennas" are mounted side-by-side on a boom.
So, should that girl be "well stacked" or "well bayed"?
BR MOTU[/nq] Make hay while the sun shines.
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[nq:1]Yes, I have heard this expression from native Englishmen a few times: "She's well stacked!" I know that they mean ... "Bayed antennas" are mounted side-by-side on a boom. So, should that girl be "well stacked" or "well bayed"? BR MOTU[/nq] Make hay while the sun shines.
[nq:2]Yes, I have heard this expression from native Englishmen a ... that girl be "well stacked" or "well bayed"? BR MOTU[/nq] [nq:1]Make hay while the sun shines.[/nq] Isn't that rather a baleful remark?
[nq:1]Yes, I have heard this expression from native Englishmen a few times: "She's well stacked!" I know that they mean ... be "bayed"? "Bayed antennas" are mounted side-by-side on a boom. So, should that girl be "well stacked" or "well bayed"?[/nq] Read "stacked" as meaning "put together" of "built". It does not pertain only to the *******.
[nq:1]Yes, I have heard this expression from native Englishmen a few times: "She's well stacked!" I know that they mean ... be "bayed"? "Bayed antennas" are mounted side-by-side on a boom. So, should that girl be "well stacked" or "well bayed"?[/nq] Just "stacked" in the U.S. A friend of mine says, with the appropriate gesture, "She's got really big... hands." [nq:1]BR MOTU[/nq] Is tha
[nq:1]Yes, I have heard this expression from native Englishmen a few times: "She's well stacked!"[/nq] The expression exists in AmE as well sans "well". "Stacked" is the usual term all on its own, though a "very" or "quite" or "monumentally" would all sound normal in conjunction.
Contrariwise (a word, by the by, used in AmE almost exclusively by those consciously evoking Tweedledum an
I thnk of it as starting with a pile of vaguely disk-shaped objects and stacking them in a chosen order. One could pile all the big ones, say, around the middle, or strategically place them 1/3 and 2/3 (roughly) of the way up. Best regards, Spehro Pefhany
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[nq:1]Yes, I have heard this expression from native Englishmen a few times: "She's well stacked!" I know that they mean ... "Bayed antennas" are mounted side-by-side on a boom. So, should that girl be "well stacked" or "well bayed"? BR MOTU[/nq] This term is well known in the USA also. It indicates good architecture. A comparable term popular during WWII is "built like a brick shithouse" indic
[nq:1]A comparable term popular during WWII is "built like a brick shithouse" indicating the ultimate in luxury.[/nq] Luxury? Hardly. Sturdiness and strength is what it means. Skitt (in Hayward, California) www.geocities.com/opus731/
[nq:2]Yes, I have heard this expression from native Englishmen a ... be "bayed"? "Bayed antennas" are mounted side-by-side on a boom.[/nq] I've assumed "well-stacked" refers to nice bosom above nice waist above nice hips above nice legs. The whole assembly is a stack. [nq:2]So, should that girl be "well stacked" or "well bayed"?[/nq] [nq:1]Just "stacked" in the U.S. A friend of mine sa