t-rolls

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Definition of t-rolls in English English dictionary

Cali rolls
plural form of Cali roll
California rolls
plural form of California roll
Eskimo rolls
plural form of Eskimo roll
Kaiser rolls
plural form of Kaiser roll
Rolls
Rolls-Royce
Rolls-Royce
(Chiefly British, Informal) anything that is the best of its type; the best quality product possible
Rolls-Royce
any of several British companies that make motor cars, aero engines etc
Swiss rolls
plural form of Swiss roll
arctic rolls
plural form of arctic roll
backwards rolls
plural form of backwards roll
barrel rolls
plural form of barrel roll
blog rolls
plural form of blog roll
bread rolls
plural form of bread roll
bulkie rolls
plural form of bulkie roll
chin rolls
plural form of chin roll
cinnamon rolls
plural form of cinnamon roll
crescent rolls
plural form of crescent roll
egg rolls
plural form of egg roll
forward rolls
plural form of forward roll
forwards rolls
plural form of forwards roll
head rolls
plural form of head roll
honor rolls
plural form of honor roll
honour rolls
plural form of honour roll
how one rolls
A way of doing things; way of life

We's down wit da bitches and hos. You know how we roll.

jelly rolls
plural form of jelly roll (alternative spelling of jellyrolls)
knee rolls
plural form of knee roll
muster rolls
plural form of muster roll
nut rolls
plural form of nut roll
rolls back
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of roll back
rolls over
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of roll over
rolls up
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of roll up
spring rolls
plural form of spring roll
sushi rolls
plural form of sushi roll
toilet rolls
plural form of toilet roll
torpedo rolls
plural form of torpedo roll
C.S. Rolls
{i} Charles Stewart Rolls (1877-1910) English who was the cofounder of the Rolls-Royce car manufacturing company (together with Frederick Henry Royce)
Charles Rolls
{i} C.S. Rolls, Charles Stewart Rolls (1877-1910) English who was the cofounder of the Rolls-Royce car manufacturing company (together with Frederick Henry Royce)
Charles Stewart Rolls
{i} C.S. Rolls, Charles Rolls (1877-1910) English who was the cofounder of the Rolls-Royce car manufacturing company (together with Frederick Henry Royce)
Master of the Rolls
the most important judge in the Court of Appeal in England and Wales. Part of his job is to choose the judges who judge cases in this court
Rolls
{i} family name; Charles Stewart Rolls (1877-1910) English who was the cofounder of the Rolls-Royce car manufacturing company(together with Frederick Henry Royce)
Rolls Royce
{i} trademark of a luxurious car registered 1908
Rolls-Royce Limited
{i} British car manufacturing firm founded by Henry Royce and C.S. Rolls in 1906
Rolls-Royce PLC
British manufacturer of aircraft engines and propulsion and power systems and, for much of the 20th century, a maker of luxury automobiles. Charles S. Rolls, a pioneer motorist and aviator, and Henry Royce, an engineer and carmaker, incorporated Rolls-Royce Ltd. in 1906. The firm's handsome, immaculately engineered cars included the Silver Ghost (introduced 1906 as "40/50 hp" model), a series of Phantoms (1925), the Silver Dawn (1949), Silver Cloud (1955), Silver Shadow (1965), and Silver Seraph (1998). In 1931 Rolls-Royce acquired Bentley Motors Ltd., another maker of fine cars. Rolls-Royce also developed a series of notable piston and jet aircraft engines, beginning with the Eagle (1914); eventually its turbine-engine operations accounted for the largest part of its sales. A fixed-price contract with Lockheed Aircraft (see Lockheed Martin Corp.) to produce an engine for its L-1011 TriStar jetliner drove Rolls-Royce into bankruptcy in 1971. It was split into two companies: its jet-engine division was taken over by the British government and later privatized as Rolls-Royce PLC, while its automobile operations were restructured into Rolls-Royce Motor Holdings Ltd. and privatized. The latter was acquired in 1980 by Vickers Ltd., which sold it to Volkswagen AG in 1998 as part of a novel agreement in which BMW AG would take over the manufacture of cars with the Rolls-Royce name in 2003, while Volkswagen retained the Bentley line
rolls
Labels in a continuous roll of a given quantity
rolls
instruments for changing the shape of the steel; the forming part of the rolls is termed as the barrel
rolls
third-person singular of roll
rolls
plural of roll
rolls
Continuous strips of fiber glass insulation, available in lengths up to 70', depending on thickness R-VALUE The capacity of an insulating material to resist heat flow; the higher the R-value, the better the insulator
rolls
A product that is produced from fine, non-combustible glass mineral wool and generally used in horizontal applications such as roof and floor areas
trolls
Like orcs, trolls are also vile creations of Morgoth They are very big and strong, but luckily also very stupid
trolls
Dwarfs of Northern mythology, living in hills or mounds; they are represented as stumpy, misshapen, and humpbacked, inclined to thieving, and fond of carrying off children or substituting one of their own offspring for that of a human mother They are called hill-people, and are especially averse to noise, from a recollection of the time when Thor used to be for ever flinging his hammer after them (Icelandic, troll )' (See Fairy ) “Out then spake the tiny Troll, No bigger than an emmet he ” Danish ballad, Eline of Villenskov Trolly A cart used in mines and on railways A railway trolly is worked by the hand, which moves a treadle; a coal-mine trolly used to be pushed by trolly-boys; ponies are now generally employed instead of boys (Welsh, trol, a cart; trolio, to roll or trundle, whence “to troll a catch”- i e to sing a catch or round )
trolls
third-person singular of troll
trolls
plural of , troll