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chain

a unit of currency equivalent to ten racks or $60,000 USD

Yo that bot spent three chains on his new whip and crashed it as soon as he backed it out. God damn.

by JShizzle from Troy January 30, 2019

16πŸ‘ 3πŸ‘Ž


chaining

Following related links on websites like Wikipedia or YouTube after you look something up until you end up on something completely unrelated to what you were initially looking for.

As a verb: to chain

"I went to look up the Columbia shuttle disaster but after an hour of chaining I somehow ended up on Elizabeth Bathory."

John: Did you get that report done?
Steve: Nope, I wasted the whole night chaining on Wikipedia.

by Xeno the Blind April 19, 2008

37πŸ‘ 16πŸ‘Ž


Chain

A chain is a unit of length; it measures 66 feet. The chain in wildland firefighting is used as the measure of the rate of spread in chains per hour.

It is also used a lot by the USDA Forest Service by hand crews to see how far they have dug line or how far they have to go.

"How much farther are we going?"

"About 4 chains." (264 ft.)

"The wildland fire is spreading at 40 chains an hour." (2640 ft. or 1/2 a mile in 1 hour)

by Alistair MacIlherron September 24, 2009

35πŸ‘ 15πŸ‘Ž


chaine

Someone that continually scrunches their face when focusing on hard (to them) and complex tasks.

He gave me the chaine face when he couldn't figure out the answer.

by captain scrunch! June 2, 2009

11πŸ‘ 3πŸ‘Ž


Chain

A word for spray painting if there are younger kids around.

Or just a general term that’s shorter to say.

β€œDude did you see that chain?”

β€œYeh bro it was wicked”

Kid - β€œwhat do you mean? What chain?”

by Imthaturbandictionaryperson February 6, 2018

6πŸ‘ 1πŸ‘Ž


Chained

When you are your 13 year old girlfriend are hookinup and y'all start getting to frisky so your braces get stuck together

I was hookinup with Sally and we got chained

by Backseat Flat Stanleys January 31, 2017

5πŸ‘ 1πŸ‘Ž


Chaining

A verb describing the action of a group of engineers sitting in a row, the first student actively completing an assignment, acting as the "base link", while the others copy one by one, from the student immediately to their left.

The base link is rotated from class to class, thus the responsibility is shared.
The activity not only builds trust and facilitates bonding within the chain group, but maximizes laziness and opens free time for drinking related activities.

Teaching assistants rarely catch on during marking, as each assignment is slightly different, similar to the changing whispered message in the children's game of telephone.

Occasionally, the later students in the chain will receive a better grade than the earlier students, or even the base link of the chain, a phenomenon yet to be fully understood.

Engineer 1: "Wow, that concrete assignment was so terrible, how did you solve question 4?"
Engineer 2: "I don't know, we chained it"
Engineer 1: "You are only hurting yourself by chaining..."

by enginerd1986 February 14, 2012

5πŸ‘ 1πŸ‘Ž