utter nonsense!

  • 81Klemens von Metternich — Metternich redirects here. For other uses, see Metternich (disambiguation). Klemens Wenzel von Metternich Portrait of Prince Metternich (c. 1825) by Sir Thomas Lawrence. Prince of Metternich …

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  • 82Shripad Amrit Dange — Communism in India Communist Party of India AITUC AIKS AIYF AISF NFIW BKMU Communist Party of India (Marxist) …

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  • 83David Headley — David Coleman Headley Born Daood Sayed Gilani June 30, 1960 (1960 06 30) (age 51) Washington, D.C., USA Charge(s) 1) plotting against employees of a newspaper in Copenhagen; 2) conspiring to bomb targets in Mumbai, India; 3) providing… …

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  • 84Matthew 5:13 — Salt from the Dead Sea Matthew 5:13 is the thirteenth verse of the fifth chapter of the Gospel of Matthew in the New Testament. It is part of the Sermon on the Mount, the first of a series of metaphors often seen as adding to the Beatitudes. The… …

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  • 85Smack — Talking complete and utter nonsense. Nader,I just got my medical license and pilot s license at the same time! Kevin,You got both in one day? Yeah Right, stop talking all that smack! …

    Dictionary of american slang

  • 86Smack — Talking complete and utter nonsense. Nader,I just got my medical license and pilot s license at the same time! Kevin,You got both in one day? Yeah Right, stop talking all that smack! …

    Dictionary of american slang

  • 87load of crap — Noun. Utter nonsense, complete rubbish, worthless. The prefixal element load of is regularly placed before nouns as an intensifier in perjorative expressions such as a load of shit, a load of bollocks, a load of tosh. E.g. That film we went to… …

    English slang and colloquialisms

  • 88load of old bollocks — Noun. Utter nonsense, complete rubbish. See load of crap …

    English slang and colloquialisms

  • 89hokum — ho•kum [[t]ˈhoʊ kəm[/t]] n. 1) utter nonsense; bunkum 2) lit. elements of low comedy or stale melodrama introduced into a play or story for laughter or effect • Etymology: 1915–20, amer.; prob. b. hocus pocus and bunkum …

    From formal English to slang

  • 90one hour’s sleep before midnight is worth two after — 1640 G. HERBERT Outlandish Proverbs no. 882 One houres sleepe before midnight is worth three after. 1670 J. RAY English Proverbs 37 One hours sleep before midnight’s worth two hours after. 1829 COBBETT Advice to Young Men I. xxxviii. It is said… …

    Proverbs new dictionary