Heist vs Chicken - What's the difference?
heist | chicken |
A robbery or burglary, especially from an institution such as a bank or museum.
* '>citation
(slang) A heist film: a film whose plot centers around an attempted robbery.
* 2008 March 6, Robert Wilonsky, "Fast and Loose", '' volume 32 number 10, page 28,
(countable) A domestic fowl, Gallus gallus , especially when young
(uncountable) The meat from this bird eaten as food.
(countable, slang) A coward.
(countable, gay slang) A young, attractive, slim man, usually having little body hair. Compare chickenhawk
(countable, slang) A young or inexperienced person.
* 1887 , Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, A Study in Scarlet , III:
* Jonathan Swift
A confrontational game in which the participants move toward each other at high speed (usually in automobiles); the player who turns first to avoid colliding into the other is the chicken (, the loser.)
The game of dare.
To avoid as a result of fear.
To develop physical or other characteristics resembling a chicken's, for example, bumps on the skin.
As a verb heist
is .As a proper noun chicken is
a cdp in alaska.heist
English
Noun
(en noun)- The Bank Job is also the first proper Jason Statham movie since his days banging about in Guy Ritchie's early heists .
Derived terms
* heisterAnagrams
* * English transitive verbs English words not following the I before E except after C rule ---- ==Norwegian Bokmål==Verb
(head)chicken
English
(wikipedia chicken) (Gallus gallus) (Gallus gallus)Noun
- "This case will make a stir, sir," he remarked. "It beats anything I have seen, and I am no chicken ."
- Stella is no chicken .
- Don't play chicken with a freight train; you're guaranteed to lose.