Baggie

NZ Army slang for infantry/grunt, usually a private. Analogous to "digger" in Australian Army; refers to the large backpack infantry use as a house when in the field.
"Baggies together strong"
- a Lance Corporal

"PoGs are not baggies"
- a baggie
by Anonymous baggie January 3, 2021
mugGet the Baggiemug.

Baggie

A Prestonian Word for Guys called James
There is no explanation as to where this came from but has become popular in and around the area
Good morning Baggie ( said to a James )
by Fosh117 April 7, 2022
mugGet the Baggiemug.

Baggie

by behindthekit February 4, 2010
mugGet the Baggiemug.

baggy

Parts of speech: noun, adjective.
A word that can be used in place of almost any other word; It can literally mean anything and people will understand what you mean by it.
Wow man, your friends are so baggy!

F*** you, you baggy motherf***er!

Can you get me that baggy for me?

I feel so baggy after smoking that gonj.
by JustC4llM3D4ddy April 2, 2015
mugGet the baggymug.

baggies

Small palstic bags used to store and sell weed in in
Got got any baggie for this eighth?
by Phaze October 14, 2004
mugGet the baggiesmug.

baggies

Local nickname for football team West Bromwich Albion Football Club in the West Midlands, England.

Oh and when I say football I mean soccer, not American football.
did you see the baggies play the other day?

yeah they were great!
by Caz_Chaos April 7, 2009
mugGet the baggiesmug.

baggy

Name given to a genre of UK bands in the late 1980s who occasionally fused guitar-based '60s-style indie music with modern dance rhythms and "funky drummer" drumbeats.
Most notable baggy members were "Madchester" bands like The Stone Roses and Happy Mondays, but the tag was mainly used for the slightly later bands that they influenced like Inspiral Carpets, The Charlatens, Blur (circa 'Leisure'), James (circa 'Gold Mother'), Five Thirty, The High, Flowered Up, Candy Flip and others.
Distinguishable by their lolloping, psychedelic-tinged sounds, pudding bowl haircuts and huge 21" flares (from which the name "baggy" derived), the scene lasted only a short while, roughly from 1989 to 1990, but served as a prototype to the more conventional sounds of Britpop, a few years later.
The baggy sound of 1990: British Madchester bands not from Manchester?
by dielo April 16, 2006
mugGet the baggymug.

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