It's an American slang expression that translates roughly as, to "purposely agitate someone to get them mad or excited." Also sometimes as to "wind someone's clock."
It means providing lodging for someone.
If you "roll" someone, you beat them up and steal their money and belongings.
"feather in the wind" - can you say that in English? And what does it mean?
When someone dresses up and become similar to a doll.
Someone who sucks up to his social superiors to get accepted.
When someone says the wind direction is south, it means the wind is blowing from the south towards another direction.
"Sucking wind" is a colloquial expression that means feeling tired, out of breath, or exhausted. It is often used to describe someone who is physically exerted or struggling to keep up with a demanding activity.
if it is used like when someone says, "How did you know about that?" you would reply, "I got a wind of it." meaning that you heard it somewhere... or something like that.
Driving rain is when a strong wind is blowing the heavy downpour of rain against, for example, someone walking into the wind.
nothing probably just a breeze
It means providing lodging for someone.
They are sizing you up.
To calculate the mean wind speed, add up all the wind speed values for the five days and divide by 5. The median wind speed is the middle value when all the wind speed values are arranged in ascending order.
This means someone knocked the living daylights out of them. It's called a euphemism.
if you mean the street meaning then its someone who gets paid to to rough someone up no a goon is someone who is paid to kill someone who is a gangster a hood nig if you kno wat i mean
Giving someone a leg up is like giving someone a hand up. It means to help someone out and give them the advantage.
There like up for it looking looking forward to it.