Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This was a euphemism for a robber or bandit. It's a fanciful way of describing what a desperado does for money.
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This is a funny way of saying a bump in the road. You'd get thrown against the other person riding with you in the wagon, so you'd say "Excuse me."
Open Road - Cowboy Junkies album - was created in 2002.
yes, it can mean going for a walk or stroll in the lauguage of Aussie slang. It can also mean following a winding or twisting road or pathway.
Mudding is slang for driving a vehicle off road, specifically in a muddy area.
"Down the road" is urban slang for a little farther.
This is northern-English slang. It means 'anyway'. Example: 'It was a good game! Any road I better go, the ol'wife is making a spiffing tea!'
The Road Agent - 1926 was released on: USA: May 1926
The cast of The Road from Latigo - 1925 includes: Edmund Cobb as Jerry Donovan Don Coleman as Cowboy Frank Ellis as Cowboy
Road Agent - 1952 was released on: USA: 29 March 1952
The Road Agent - 1917 was released on: USA: 4 February 1917
Looks like rhyming slang to me - something that rhymes with "frog and toad" that you would "hit" would be a road - it's time to hit the road or leave.
Slang meaning a small car.