Brass is a slang word for money. No doubt your question may have two or three meanings, such as Loosing your money while sitting on the grass, or you may as well throw your money away than, say, put it on a horse race. Anyway it is money lost.
This is a military expression to remind people how to properly load a belt fed machine gun. The belt of ammunition is placed on the feed tray with the exposed brass shell casings facing down and the links facing up towards the sky. Hence "brass to the grass."
Sparse rhymes with arse as does: Cars, Class, grass, brass
phoneme, the sound of the word that makes it different, as in bait-gate, can-man, brass-grass
Before Christ
grass/weed
Brass tacks are what you see when you take the upholstery off furniture - the wood is traditionally held together by that kind of fastener. "Getting down to brass tacks" means stripping away anything not essential.
Grass as it is the only one not made of metal.
I play a brass instrument. Be sure to polish the brass doorknobs. The statue was made of brass. Your heart starts beating like a big brass band.
The A in grass has a short A sound, as in gas and brass. (The long A is heard in grace.)
Yes. The A in grass has a short A sound, as in gas and brass. (The long A is heard in grace.)
The word "grass" has a short vowel sound. The "a" in "grass" is pronounced as /æ/.
Brass, mass, pass, glass, grass, bass, pass,fast,cast,gasass, bass, brass, crass, en masse, gas, glass, grass, harass, lass, last, mass, mass., pass, pasts, sass,mass, glass,Do you mean "rhyme with"? bass (the fish), crass, gas, lass, mass, pass, sass...
Sparse rhymes with arse as does: Cars, Class, grass, brass
If you mean Mass Brass, then it is a piece of music from the 1950s
If you mean Mass Brass, then it is a piece of music from the 1950s
Some words that rhyme with 'crass' include: Grass, Brass, Glass, Sass, and Bass
phoneme, the sound of the word that makes it different, as in bait-gate, can-man, brass-grass
...And dewdrops on glass ...Shining gold brass