bone

Related to bone: Bone Cancer

bone

1. verb, vulgar slang To have sexual intercourse. I can't believe you two boned last night!
2. noun, vulgar slang The penis. You need to keep your bone in your pants and stop sleeping with random girls!
3. noun, vulgar slang An erection. I got a bone while daydreaming in math class today—it was so embarrassing!
4. The trombone. I used to play the bone in the marching band in high school.
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

bone

verb
See boner

bone

1. n. a trombone. (see also bones.) She plays the bone like nobody’s business.
2. Go to boner.

bones

1. n. dice. (See additional forms at bone.) Toss me the bones and get out your checkbooks.
2. n. a nickname for a ship’s physician. (From sawbones. Also the nickname of the doctor on the starship Enterprise of Star Trek fame.) This fat bones actually wanted me to lose weight.
3. n. a nickname for a skinny person. (Also a term of address.) Ask bones there what he wants to drink.
4. n. dollars; money; cash. The tickets only cost a few bones, but the play was lousy and I want my money back.
See also: bone
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions
See:
  • (all) skin and bones
  • (as) dry as a bone
  • a bag of bones
  • a bone in your leg
  • a bone of contention
  • a bone to pick
  • a dog that'll bring a bone will carry a bone
  • bad to the bone
  • bag of bones
  • bare bones
  • bare-bones
  • be (all) skin and bone(s)
  • be as dry as a bone
  • be bone dry
  • be bone idle
  • be close to the bone
  • be like a dog with a bone
  • be skin and bone
  • be soaked to the bone
  • big boned
  • bone
  • bone dry
  • bone factory
  • bone idle
  • bone in (one's) leg
  • bone of contention
  • bone of contention, the
  • bone orchard
  • bone out
  • bone shaking
  • bone to pick
  • bone to pick, have a
  • bone up
  • bone up on (something)
  • bone-crunching
  • bone-deep
  • bonehead
  • boneheaded
  • bone-idle
  • bones
  • boneyard
  • bred in the bone
  • chill (one) to the bone
  • chill (one) to the marrow
  • chill somebody to the bone/marrow
  • chilled to the bone
  • close to the bone
  • close to/near the bone
  • crazy bone
  • cut something to the bone
  • cut to the bone
  • cut to the quick
  • cut, pare, etc. something to the bone
  • doesn't have a (certain kind of) bone in (one's) body
  • dog and bone
  • dry as a bone
  • dry as dust
  • feel (something) in (one's) bones
  • feel in bones
  • feel in one's bones
  • feel in your bones
  • feel it in (one's) bones
  • feel it in one's bones, to
  • feel something in your bones
  • flesh out
  • funny bone
  • hard words break no bones
  • have a bone on
  • have a bone to pick
  • have a bone to pick (with one)
  • have a bone to pick with somebody
  • have a bone to pick with someone
  • have a bone to pick, to
  • head bone
  • in (one's) bones
  • in bones
  • in your bones
  • jump (one's) bones
  • jump bones
  • jump someone’s bones
  • jump someone's bones
  • know (something) in (one's) bones
  • knuckle bones
  • knucklebones
  • laid to the bone
  • lazy-bones
  • make (one's) bones
  • make no bones about
  • make no bones about (something)
  • Make no bones about it
  • make no bones about it, to
  • make no bones about something
  • make no bones about something/about doing something
  • make old bones
  • meat on (one's) bones
  • not a bone in your body
  • not have a (kind of) bone in (one's) body
  • not have a (some kind of) bone in (one's) body
  • not have a...bone in your body
  • nothing but skin and bones
  • nothing but skin and bones and skin and bones
  • pare (something) to the bone
  • pick a bone (with someone), to
  • pick a bone with (someone)
  • point the bone at
  • point the bone at (someone or something)
  • prayer bones
  • put (some) meat on (one's) bones
  • put flesh on (the bones of) (something)
  • put flesh on something
  • rattle-bones
  • roll the bones
  • silked to the bone
  • skin and bone
  • skin and bones
  • skin and bones, (nothing but)
  • soak (someone) to the bone
  • soaked to the bone
  • sticks and stones may break my bones (but words will never hurt me)
  • sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me
  • sticks and stones will break my bones, but words will never hurt me
  • the bare bones
  • the nearer the bone, the sweeter the meat
  • throw (one) a bone
  • throw a bone
  • throw a bone to (someone)
  • Throw me a bone!
  • throw somebody a bone
  • tickle (someone's) funny bone
  • to (one's) bones
  • to (one's) bootstraps
  • to (one's) cost
  • to the bone
  • to your bones
  • toss (someone) a bone
  • toss a bone to (someone)
  • wear (one's) fingers to the bone
  • while two dogs are fighting for bone, a third one runs away with it
  • work (one's) fingers to the bone
  • work fingers to the bone
  • work one's fingers to the bone
  • work one's fingers to the bone, to
  • work your fingers to the bone
References in periodicals archive
* The blood clots and stabilizes the fractured bone, and tiny blood vessels grow into the clot to facilitate healing.
'In just a very short period of time, we saw that running was building bone significantly in mice,' Styner said.
In a statement released July 14, 2009, the CHR said that more human bones were recovered from the three sites after a witness, whom De Lima said was a former member of the DDS, pointed at the spot.
Bone allografts have long been used as a natural substitute to cover the bone defect [4].
By contrast, NELL-1 encourages stem cells to form bone cells instead of fat cells.
An anthropologist tells of other sources of bone. "These bones must invariably be from the cannon bone of an animal or from the radius or ulna of a human....
BOnE MarrOw tranSplant Normal bone marrow, usually from the hip bone or the breast bone, replaces defective or non-functioning bone marrow.
" Fibrous dysplasia can affect any bone in your body.
Bone loss leads to an increased risk of fracture that is magnified by other aging-associated declines in functioning.
At present, autologous bone grafts are the predominant type of bone transplant in Japan.
Conclusion: Biochemical markers of bone turnover along with measurements of bone density can help optimize the management of osteoporosis.
Moreover, Jungers contends, marks made by muscles on bone, or the lack of marks, implies nothing about an individual's mobility.
Fibrous dysplasia is a rare, nonneoplastic bone disease in which osteoblasts are incapable of producing mature trabecular bone.
What we have not heard as much about are HIV-related bone disturbances, but these are well-documented in the clinical literature.