Yes, Gravy Popsicle = GOOD
It is when the Italians needed a little more flava loving in their life and with their pasta and meat..so badabign badaboom they created the gravy
Gravy is a noun so anything with A, And Or The in front of it is grammatically correct.Examples: I have sauce and gravy on my turkey.I have a small amount of gravy on my mashed potatoes.The gravy tastes good
it is an old military term for good sight
Try itit taste awsome. i love gravy and peas
yes
verb meaning "kick" is Amer.Eng. 1877
No it does not. But turkey with gravy on it tastes good. Why did you even ask this question anyways? You kids are so pointless with your stupid internet responses!?
Comes from the once semi-popular cultural slang term "its all gravy" or "its all good", or more recently "no worries." Simply put it means "its OK." Its all gravy in the navy" is simply an addition of the words "in the navy" to make a rhyme, popularized and used almost exclusively by US Navy Sailors.
The term is used when someone males a particularly good effort to save par or win a hole.
Yes it is a British word for a sauce.
I dont know what you mean but maybe the person was hungry.Another suggestion:Back in the 1960s the term 'dig' was used informally to indicate one liked something, as in 'I really dig this music'. The term is especially associated with the hippy movement, or lack of movement, because the philosophy of hippies was not to do very much at all.In that context, the phrase 'I'm digging your gravy' would mean 'I'm enjoying your gravy', and the person speaking about the gravy would be using the phrase as a humorous reference to the common phrase, 'digging (you're) grave'.However, today the phrase 'digging your gravy' is also used to indicate someone thinks you're really hot. Not sure of the exact origin, but it's possibly arisen among people in contact with former-hippy grandparents. No doubt the pun on 'grave' is intentional.