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dreadnaught

1. an anchor used by a sailor, typically used as an exaggeration to describe ones penis size

2. a wrestling move known as the "stack", in which one man appears to be raping the bottom man
Luna: "doit now Olive! We need it! put in the dreadnaught!"

"y000 I'm about to put the ill dreadnaught on this ho
by $tephen Compton May 23, 2008
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drea'd

1.When you allow more than one person to engage you sexually

2. When you get a train ran on you

3. When you are gang banged
In call of duty when you are engaged by more than on person you say " oh shit I got drea'd "
by itsokheswhite August 6, 2011
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Related Words

do it yourself dreader

Some one who clearly hasn't done even the simpelist form of daily hygien in mounths. commenly abbriviated as a DIYD. this phrase comes from the fact that thier hair actually starts to dread ionto horrible dirty looking dread locks on its own.(not appliable to a bald headed person)
you stink sooooooooo bad if u actually had hair I bet u would be a Do It Yourself Dreader.
by JynxxStarrdust December 13, 2010
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dread

Swedish 1337 all-knower.
That dread dude still rocks on Bnet?
by dF June 2, 2003
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Dread

A scottish fucker who has people worshiping him for his money, also known as Dready Teddy.
Dread talks about his money, but does not give any of it out.
by jamesdavid October 13, 2007
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Dread Hawks

A type of hair du that has a few dread locks dangling on each side, and the rest of the hair is cut short.
Ceilidh was admiring the beautiful dread hawks on the other girl.
by Rasa June 27, 2007
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Dreadnought

A dreadnought was a type of battleship that emerged in the early 20th century. It all started in 1906, when the Royal Navy launched HMS Dreadnought. With its steam turbine engine, and uniform “all big gun” battery, its design was so superior that it made literally every other battleship in the world completely obsolete. The USA, UK, Germany, France, Italy, Japan, Russia, Spain, the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and even Chile, Brazil and Argentina frantically began building and buying ships of this type, which collectively became known as “dreadnoughts”. This “dreadnought race” is comparable to the nuclear arms race of the Cold War. Dreadnoughts were enormously expensive, and a nation’s technological, economic and industrial power was measured by how many dreadnoughts it possessed. Dreadnoughts ruled the waves up until WWII, when the age of battleships in general came to an end. Aircraft carriers and naval aviation superseded them as the key striking power of a modern fleet.
British and German dreadnoughts clashed inconclusively during WWI in 1916 at the battle of Jutland, considered by some the largest naval battle in history.

Spain built three dreadnoughts of the España class. Because of the feeble Spanish economy, they were the smallest dreadnoughts ever built. They did see combat action, but all three were destroyed in rather ignominious ways.
by A solid cube of tungsten November 1, 2019
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