full as an egg

  • 1full — (as a boot/bull/bull s bum) adj Australian drunk. Full or full as a tick were euphemisms for drunk in Britain in the 19th century, but are now obsolete. Earlier Australianisms on the same pat tern were full as an egg and full as a goat …

    Contemporary slang

  • 2Egg donation — Intervention MeSH D018587 Egg donation is the process by which a woman provides one or several (usually 10 15) eggs (ova, oocytes) for purposes of assisted reproduction or biomedical research. For assisted reproduction purposes, egg d …

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  • 3Egg Harbor Township, New Jersey —   Township   Map of Egg Harbor Township in Atlantic County. Inset: Location of Atlantic County highlighted in the State of New Jersey …

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  • 4Egg Moon — full moon in April …

    Eponyms, nicknames, and geographical games

  • 5Egg (biology) — Bird eggs and others (click on image for key) …

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  • 6Egg (food) — Chicken egg redirects here. For the causality dilemma, see Chicken or the egg. On the left a chicken egg, the egg most commonly e …

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  • 7egg — egg1 eggless, adj. eggy, adj. /eg/, n. 1. the roundish reproductive body produced by the female of certain animals, as birds and most reptiles, consisting of an ovum and its envelope of albumen, jelly, membranes, egg case, or shell, according to… …

    Universalium

  • 8Egg decorating — Ukrainian Easter eggs This article is about egg decorating in general. For the Easter tradition of egg decorating, see Easter egg. Egg decorating is the art or craft of decorating eggs. It is quite a popular art/craft form because of the… …

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  • 9Egg Marketing Board — The Egg Marketing Board was an agricultural marketing organization set up by the British government in December 1956 to stabilise the market for eggs due to a widespread collapse in sales. The Board purchased all the eggs produced in the UK,… …

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  • 10egg — {{11}}egg (n.) mid 14c., from northern England dialect, from O.N. egg, which vied with M.E. eye, eai (from O.E. æg) until finally displacing it after 1500; both are from P.Gmc. *ajja(m) (Cf. O.S., M.Du., Du., O.H.G., Ger. ei, Goth. ada), probably …

    Etymology dictionary