Barrie Colts are coming in hot, but something special is brewing in Kitchener. Tonight at the Aud, the Rangers take on the Colts in the first game of the OHL final. www.therecord.com/sports/hocke...
This lowlife needs to be named kitchener.citynews.ca/2026/05/05/m... Man arrested after ceremonial gong disappears from cancer centre
A placename.
“Barrie Colts are coming in hot, but something special is brewing in Kitchener. Tonight at the Aud, the Rangers take on the Colts in the first game of the OHL final. www.therecord.com/sports/hocke...”
Add your own interpretation of "Kitchener".
UK and Irish slang — Cockney, Scouse, Geordie, Yorkshire, Glaswegian, Brummie, Welsh, West Country, plus Irish English. Centuries of regional dialects feeding into modern British and Irish street talk.
See all British & Irish slang slang on Slangora.
Browse all slang words starting with K.
Kitchener Ranger named OHL’s most outstanding player
“This lowlife needs to be named kitchener.citynews.ca/2026/05/05/m... Man arrested after ceremonial gong disappears from cancer centre”
“Kitchener Ranger named OHL’s most outstanding player”
“Kitchener Rangers vs. Barrie Colts OHL Final Series Preview ift.tt/Ed0BVcZ #NHL #THW”
“Cllr Richardson also thanks the internal audit team. Cllr Allt asks about a discrepancy in fees for basement units, in Kitchener they're lower, why? DCAO Gayman says there is a fee review coming in June, so stay tuned!”
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(countable) for someone who worked in a kitchen.
Kitchener means: for someone who worked in a kitchen.. There is no real cause for parental concern; it is descriptive vocabulary rather than risky behaviour. If your teen uses it, context will usually make the intent clear. A short, curious question about where they heard it is usually all that is needed to know whether to follow up. For most families this word will pass by without incident; it is more a vocabulary curiosity than a parenting concern.
Kitchener means: for someone who worked in a kitchen.. Register: neutral, standard English. A common learner mistake is using the word in a register it does not fit, or assuming a single global meaning; native speakers immediately notice when slang appears in formal contexts, so always check the surrounding register before producing it yourself. A formal-English equivalent (a synonym or descriptive phrase) is usually safer in writing. When in doubt, paraphrase rather than reuse the slang form.
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