row in British means to quarrel or argue.
The British word 'lift' means the same as the American elevator
Queue = line (of people)
Literally means "testicles", also used to mean "nonsense".
The British word "jam" can mean a couple of things. If you mean the food, a sweet paste of fruit, Americans also use the same word to mean that food. If you mean "jam" as in "stuck together," Americans use that word in the same context, but also use the word "cram."
The definition of the word row is usually a fight.
A fight or a disagreement. It can also mean a collection of items, like a row of chairs.
The "British language" is English. So the answer is that it means "row".
deepavali means ''row of lights''.
deepAvalai = row of lamps..
The British word 'lift' means the same as the American elevator
There is no particular word meaning 'British General' alone.
Argy bargy is a slang term for an argument, a row. (mostly British).
It can mean to row a boat (a back and forth motion to move a boat using a special tool) , a row like a row of seats (a continous repetition of something like seats that form a line) , or a fight.
The British word 'lift' means the same as the American elevator
It means that he is a British citizen. He lives in Britain.
it mean you row your boat with oars
'Netspil' is a common word in the Danish language. When the word 'netspil' is translated into English, the most common meaning of this word is 'front row'.