To dab something, one is touching something lightly. For instance, if someone dabs a paint brush against a canvas, they are touching the brush lightly against the canvas.
A little dab will do you. Dab some on me! A dab and a promise will do the trick! My favorite painting technique to give texture is the ol' "stab and dab" method.
In essence, the phrase means "slapped precisely in the center." According to the Oxford English Dictionary, smack-dab showed up in print in 1892: "He hit him smack dab in the mouth" [Dialect Notes I, 232]. The first element, smack, is used as an adverb. It is defined as "with, or as with, a smack; suddenly and violently; slap." It appears in 1782 in Cowper's John Gilpin: "Smack went the whip, round went the wheels." The second element, dab, means "with a dab or sudden contact." Robert Armin's Nest of Ninnies uses it in this sense in 1608: "He dropt downe..as heauy as if a leaden plummet... had fallen on the earth dab." A variation is slap-dab: "He was goin' that fas' he run slap-dab agin me afo' he seed me" [1886, Turf, Field & Farm XLII. 174/3]. Slap-bang is close, but it meant immediately rather than centered: "Slap-bang shop: a petty cook's shop where there is no credit given, but what is had must be paid down with the ready slap-bang, i.e. immediately" [1785, Grose's Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue]. In essence, the phrase means "slapped precisely in the center." According to the Oxford English Dictionary, smack-dab showed up in print in 1892: "He hit him smack dab in the mouth" [Dialect Notes I, 232]. The first element, smack, is used as an adverb. It is defined as "with, or as with, a smack; suddenly and violently; slap." It appears in 1782 in Cowper's John Gilpin: "Smack went the whip, round went the wheels." The second element, dab, means "with a dab or sudden contact." Robert Armin's Nest of Ninnies uses it in this sense in 1608: "He dropt downe..as heauy as if a leaden plummet... had fallen on the earth dab." A variation is slap-dab: "He was goin' that fas' he run slap-dab agin me afo' he seed me" [1886, Turf, Field & Farm XLII. 174/3]. Slap-bang is close, but it meant immediately rather than centered: "Slap-bang shop: a petty cook's shop where there is no credit given, but what is had must be paid down with the ready slap-bang, i.e. immediately" [1785, Grose's Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue].
When we say that something is alive. we mean it has life in it.
If you mean in sync. It means that something is coordinated and in agreement with something else.
this mean to do something with out asking
yes
It is an expression that means exactly - as in smack dab in the middle
A dab can be a verb ("Dab it here.")It can be a noun ("Look at that dab.")It is not an adverb. Hint: Most adverbs end in "ly" because they describe how something occurs ("happily", "quickly", "rapidly", "sadly")
IGN stands for ignition. DAB I do not know.
Maybe they mean DOB which is Date of Birth.
dab dab dab
apply in a patting motion, extra small portion
just a guess, but decibels (loudness)?
if you mean a dad then yes she does but her dad id in the military
In text, "dab" can refer to a quick, light touch or application of something, often used in contexts like makeup or applying ointments. Additionally, it can denote the popular dance move where a person drops their head into the elbow of one arm while raising the opposite arm, often used to express celebration or excitement. In slang, "dab" also refers to a method of consuming cannabis concentrates.
This is easy!! You just dab it's nose!!:)
Your health is not worth making something cheap and home-made.