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LGD's definitions

sussed

Sorted.


Used when a solution is reached, or when a task is accomplished.
Hey, have you got that budget proposal sussed?
by LGD May 19, 2004
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LGD

Me.

:p



This is an acronym for my usual Internet handle/nick/username.
"I don't like that LGD and his/her stupid definitions..."
by LGD May 19, 2004
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batsman

A term used in the sport of Cricket.

Comparable to a batter in baseball.
The batsman just hit the ball straight out of the ground!!
by LGD May 10, 2004
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delivery

A term used in the sport of Cricket.

When the bowler sends the ball down to the batsman.
That last delivery nearly took the batsman's head off!
by LGD May 10, 2004
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doosra

A term used in the sport of Cricket.

Originaly an Urdu word meaning "other one".

It is used to describe a delivery that makes the ball hit the ground and then turn (change direction) in the opposite way to what is expected.
The English batsmen were completely flummoxed by Murali's doosra.
by LGD May 10, 2004
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whinge

Verb To whinge

A British/Australian/New Zealand (possibly South African and other commonwealth) English word which describes incessant complaining. A behaviour commonly associated with poms/pommes/pohms/pommies (people from England).
If you want to get anything done in this country you've gotta whinge till you're blue in the face!

Aw piss off ya blardy whingin' pommie!
by LGD October 26, 2007
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baseball

A commercialised version of the game 'rounders', popular among little girls in Britain and other commonwealth countries. Sri Lanka also had a similar game which they called 'ell-ey'.

In general, baseball is considered to be an American substitute for cricket. A 'baseball is to cricket what checkers is to chess' sort of thing.

Back in the 1700s in Boston (USA), cricket was played by English immigrants, particularly the ones that considered themselves to be upper class. But Boston had also acquired a plebeian and Irish flavour. The game of rounders, an earlier form of cricket which seems to have been favoured by the Irish, as well as by English children in the 16th century, became the game of choice among the youth.

The Boston cricketers of the time encouraged rounders as a secondary diversion, and even allowed it to be played in their cricket fields by those who preferred an alternative to the more formal sport of cricket. So 'early baseball' (ie US Rounders) grew up in the USA under cricket's benign umbrella. It stayed that way for about the first hundred years of its existence.

By the 1900s, cricket and baseball were looking far more different from each other than in baseball's earlier years. And by that time, it had become an issue of "cricket OR baseball" in the USA...and everyone knows what happened.
"I am a former collegiate baseball player who was always curious about cricket, but never found the time, or the avenue, to explore it - until Fox Sports World broadcast Zimbabwe in India, five years ago. The intricacies of the game speak to the strategic, patient baseball fan within me."
by LGD September 8, 2006
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