gettind jarred

bobbycotton

PoolHall Junkie
Silver Member
I got jarred every day for a week playing ponytail in huntsville ala. in a restaurant over a strip club called the underground ago go. I was with buckwheat the gin player. they were jarring me at lunch upstairs and one of the dancers finally woke me up to it after we were 6 thousand stuck!
 
Jar, Chicago style

I got jarred every day for a week playing ponytail in huntsville ala. in a restaurant over a strip club called the underground ago go. I was with buckwheat the gin player. they were jarring me at lunch upstairs and one of the dancers finally woke me up to it after we were 6 thousand stuck!

How many times did Johnny Morris get you in Chicago, Bobby?

The Beard
 
The Jar

Hey Freddie,strangely enough I never got jarred in chicago. I saw more people get jarred in the south than you can count.I saw RichardA. jar his brother Phil back in the sixties when Phil was playing snooker. I think he also jarred me when I was playing J. Brock, and Richard was my friend, hahhahah
 
jarred

v. intr.

1.

To make or utter a harsh sound.
2.

To be disturbing or irritating; grate: The incessant talking jarred on my nerves.
3.

To shake or shiver from impact.
4.

To clash or conflict: "We ourselves . . . often jar with the landscape" (Isak Dinesen).

v. tr.

1.

To bump or cause to move or shake from impact.
2.

To startle or unsettle; shock.

n.

1.

A jolt; a shock. See Synonyms at collision.
2.

Harsh or grating sound; discord.


[Perhaps of imitative origin.]
jar'ring·ly adv.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
Cite This Source
Word Origin & History

jar (n.)
"cylindrical vessel," 1421, possibly from M.Fr. jarre "liquid measure" (smaller than a barrel), from Prov. jarra, from Arabic jarrah "earthen water vessel" (whence also Sp. jarra, It. giarra).
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
 
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