You or anybody else has my permission to print and post the glossary as long as the source (billiards.colostate.edu) is clear, and as long as it is not used in a commercial product for sale (without my permission).The reason I asked is this. I was just over to KINKO's, the other day & they made some big posters for me & they were able to scan another, resize it & it made a great framed pic for my friends Pool Room
Thanks for the info. I've made a few changes and additions per some of your suggestions.
Would you or others care to share a definition of "lounge lizard?" The definition I had was inaccurate and I removed it.
Thanks again,
Dave
The usage I've heard and the definitions available on-line say that lounge lizards are guys. I think the term is not pool-specific.... A Lounge Lizard is a prostitute. Could also be alongside a pool bunny but the lizard charges and the bunny gives it away for free to pool players . ...
The usage I've heard and the definitions available on-line say that lounge lizards are guys. I think the term is not pool-specific.
Thanks. I've added the following to the glossary:When someone says " he's doing the business " or anything like that it's referring to being a shady deal, most likely referring to a dump. I think many on here can vouch.
Thanks for the info. I've decided to just keep it simple in the glossary with:As to the Tom and George you had it right in essence but not specifically . George is good and Tom is bad but in a different sense . When using in reference to a person ( one arm willy is George ) it just means they are cool, don't have to worry what you do or say around them as they are not a cop nor a snitch nor will they run their mouth. Calling someone Tom is just the opposite. The second meanings are in reference to a situation. As in, the back alley is George for doing that right now ( no worry of cops or civilians to interfere or snitch or whatever. Conversely, that bar is Tom - it's filled with a bunch of off duty cops ( or whatever you get the idea - you might say nah, Tom's in the bar right now )
I've also researched this and decided to just leave it out.The usage I've heard and the definitions available on-line say that lounge lizards are guys. I think the term is not pool-specific.A Lounge Lizard is a prostitute. Could also be alongside a pool bunny but the lizard charges and the bunny gives it away for free to pool players.
I've added "case ball."Case ball - kinda differing from case money a case ball or case game is a good thing. A case ball is the last ball needed to win in a game of one pocket. Case game usually refers to a 9 ball set ( last game needed to win.
Case game probably came from the card-playing term for the single card left in the deck or hidden in a hand that is important.
"I lost when the case seven showed up in the river. Bad beat."
or
"East had to have the case spade."
I think it has nothing to due with cue luggage.
Thanks again. I've added it."Rubberize"...to drive a ball into a rail instead of a pocket.
Lou Figueroa just enlightened us about this in another thread....
...many of us weren't aware of this term...."cause we never miss...![]()
Thanks Jay! I just added all of these to glossary. I already had "on tilt."He "moves good" - someone who is clever at game making or someone who plays a smart game. Better yet is someone "who has all the moves"
"He moves good at One Pocket" - Someone who knows a lot of tricky shots playing One Pocket.
"tough action" - could mean a good player or a hard place to make money.
"good spot" - a place where you are likely to make money.
"sloughing off" - losing some money to get a better game.
"getting your nose open" - related to "going off" or losing all your money.
Being "on tilt" is when a player has lost control of himself.
"crossroader" - An old time term for a road man.
"pool imposter" - someone who looks, acts and dresses like a player but can't really play that well.