Eiffel tower urban dictionary

  1. What Does Eiffel Tower Mean In Slang & How To Use It
  2. Eiffel Tower
  3. Eiffel Tower in Paris


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What Does Eiffel Tower Mean In Slang & How To Use It

Table of Contents • • • • • • • • • • • • A sexual position between three people The Eiffel Tower is a common slang term used to refer to a sexual position involving three people, typically involving one person being the “base” for the other two to engage in sexual activity. It is not a commonly used term and is considered vulgar. In terms of responding to someone who uses this term, it is best to avoid using it yourself and instead steer the conversation in a different direction or simply not engage with the person using this term. Example 1 Friend 1: “Hey, have you ever heard of the Eiffel Tower?” Friend 2: “I’d rather not talk about that. Can we change the subject?” In this example, Friend 2 is uncomfortable with the topic and politely suggests changing the subject. Example 2 Man: “I saw a video on TikTok of the Eiffel Tower and it looked so hot.” Woman: “I don’t want to hear about that kind of thing, it’s disrespectful” In this example, the woman expresses her discomfort and disapproval of the man’s comment and wants to change the subject. What does Eiffel Tower mean from a guy The phrase “Eiffel Tower” is a slang term that refers to a sexual act involving three people, typically a woman in the middle with a man engaging in anal sex while another man performs oral sex on her at the same time. It is not appropriate to use in a polite conversation. It is impossible for me to know whether the guy likes or hates you, trying to make a move or not, based on this term. You sh...

Eiffel Tower

I must say a word about the Eiffel Tower. I do not know what purpose it serves today. But I then heard it greatly disparaged as well as praised. I remember that Tolstoy was the chief among those who disparaged it. He said that the Eiffel Tower was a monument of man's folly, not of his wisdom. Tobacco, he argued, was the worst of all intoxicants, inasmuch as a man addicted to it was tempted to commit crimes which a drunkard never dared to do; liquor made a man mad, but tobacco clouded his intellect and made him build castles in the air. The Eiffel Tower was one of the creations of a man under such influence. • • Afrikaans: • Albanian: f • Arabic: m ( burj ʔeyfel ) Egyptian Arabic: m ( burg eivel, burg eifel ) Hijazi Arabic: m ( burj ʔēfil, burj ʔīvil ) • Armenian: ( Ēyfelyan aštarak ) • Assamese: ( aiphel tawar ) • Azerbaijani: • Bashkir: ( Eyfel’ başnyahı ) • Basque: • Belarusian: f ( Éjfjeljeva vjéža ) • Bengali: ( aiphel ṭaōẇar ) • Bulgarian: f ( Ajfelova kúla ) • Burmese: ( ihpail ) • Catalan: f • Chechen: ( Ejfelin bˀow ) • Chinese: Cantonese: / ( baa 1 lai 4 tit 3 taap 3 ) Mandarin: / ( Àifēi'ěr Tiětǎ ), / ( Āifēi'ěr Tiětǎ ), / ( Bālí Tiětǎ ) Wu: / • Chuvash: ( Éjfel t̬urulĕ ) • Corsican: f • Czech: f, f, f, f • Danish: n • Dhivehi: ( eifel ṭavaru ) • Dutch: m • Esperanto: • Estonian: • Faroese: n • Finnish: Eiffel- • French: f, ( by ellipsis ) f • Georgian: ( eipelis ḳošḳi ) • German: m • Greek: m ( Pýrgos tou Áifel ) • Guaraní: • Gujarati: m ( ɛphīl ṭāvar ), m ( ɛph...

Eiffel Tower in Paris

Our Rating Neighborhood Eiffel Tower & Les Invalides (7th Arrondissement) Hours Daily early-July to early-Sep 9am–12:45am; early-Sept to early-July 9:30am–11:45pm; Sept to mid-June stairs open only to 6:30pm Transportation Métro: Trocadéro or Bir Hakeim. RER: Champ de Mars–Tour Eiffel Phone 01-44-11-23-23 Prices Lift to 2nd floor 16€ adults, 8€ ages 12–24, 4€ ages 4–11; lift to 2nd and 3rd floors 25€ adults, 12.50€ ages 12–24, 6.30€ ages 4–11; stairs to 2nd floor 10€ adults, 5€ ages 12–24, 2.50€ ages 4–11; stairs to 2nd floor and lift to the top 19€ adults, 9.50€ ages 12 to 24, and 4.80€ ages 4 to 11. Free admission children ages 3 and under. Web site About our rating system In his wildest dreams, Gustave Eiffel probably never imagined that the tower he built for the 1889 World’s Fair would become the ultimate symbol of Paris, and for many, of France. Originally slated for demolition after its first 20 years, the Eiffel Tower is one of the most visited sites in the nation. No fewer than 50 engineers and designers worked on the plans, which resulted in a remarkably solid structure that, despite its height (324m/1,063 ft., including the antenna) does not sway in the wind. But while the engineers rejoiced, others howled. When the project for the tower was announced, a group of artists and writers, including Guy de Maupassant and Alexandre Dumas fils, published a manifesto that referred to it as an “odious column of bolted metal.” Others were less diplomatic: Novelist Joris-Ka...