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roti
Traditional Indian bread, normally eaten with curries or cooked vegetables. It is made most often from wheat flour, cooked on a flat or slightly concave iron griddle called a tawah. Like breads around the world, it is a staple accompaniment to other foods.
food
1 comments
rung
Around
safe
To be ok.
salmon tot retriever
Mongrel, Common/mixed bred dog.
saltfish
Fish dried and salted for preservation. The fish is usually the Atlantic or Pacific cod, however, pollock and haddock are sometimes used. Preparation typically involves an initial step of soaking in water overnight or boiling to remove the excess salt.
food
scabical
A promiscuous woman.
person
scotch
To make room for someone
1 comments
scrunting
Seeing hard times
1 comments
sea cat
An octopus.
animal
food
3 comments
sea grape
A small green fruit resembling grapes both in individual appearance, and the fact that it grows in bunches. Some fruit become tinged with red or purple as they ripen. The fruits can be quite sweet, but tend to have a salty astringent taste, particularly when not fully ripe. The plants grow in areas close to the sea.
food
plant
8 comments
shite
Feces. Excrement
profanity
2 comments
shittings
Diarrhea or other forms of upset stomach.
4 comments
shush
Order to tell someone to "keep quiet"
1 comments
sida
Beside or alongside.
1 comments
siddung
To sit down.
1 comments
sketel
A promiscuous woman.
person
7 comments
skin out
To expose the genital area by spreading the legs
4 comments
skin teet
To grin
1 comments
skin up
To make a facial expression of scorn, disgust or contempt by the raising of the upper lip
skylark
To play around or play the fool.
1 comments
sometimeish
Moody. Prone to frequent changes in mood, attitude or behaviour.
1 comments
sorrel
Roselle (hibiscus sabdariffa) is a member of the hibiscus, okra and cotton family. This annual herb grows erect and is sparsely branched. The stems are green or red, with green leaves and the calyxes and three to five lobed and red when matured. Sorrel is acidic and has a flavour similar to the cranberry. The leaves and flowers are edible.
plant
food
2 comments
soursop
The edible fruit of Annona muricata, a broadleaf, flowering, evergreen tree native to Mexico, Cuba, Central America, the Caribbean and northern South America. The flesh of the fruit consists of an edible, white pulp, some fiber, and a core of indigestible, black seeds. The sweet pulp is used to make juice, as well as candies, sorbets, and ice cream flavorings.
food
fruit
plant
16 comments
star plum
A round fruit about the size of a tennis ball. It has a glossy leathery skin that is either green, purple, or some combination of the two colours. Inside is a purple and white milky flesh that exhibits a distinct star pattern. The fruit is sweet and eaten raw
food
plant
fruit
steups
A sucking noise made with the tongue pressed against the teeth used to express annoyance, frustration, or contempt.
4 comments
stew dumpling
A desert similar to payme or dukunu. It is made from mixture of grated pumpkin, sweet potato, cornmeal, flour, and various spices wrapped in banana leaf and steamed on a rack over boiling water.
food
2 comments
stush
Describes a good looking, well dressed female
su su
A form of savings where a group of people pay an agreed sum of money on a periodic basis (usually monthly) and each period one member of the group takes all the money that has been paid (their share). This practice has been traced back to Yoruba credit system.
22 comments
suck a bubbi
A homemade frozen pop popular with children. It is made by pouring mixed drinks into small transparent plastic bags, tying the bags to seal them, and freezing. They are normally consumed by sucking a small hole bitten in one corner of the bag.
sugar apple
An edible round, ovoid, or cone shaped fruit around 6-10 cm in diameter, with a lumpy skin. The skin colour changes from bright green to a pale whitish-green as the fruit ripens. The sweet flesh is white or very pale yellow, and has a custard-like texture. Hard , shiny brownish black seeds are spread throughout the insides.
food
plant
29 comments