A fork of Rural Dictionary
Time and Relative Dimensions in Space
The Doctor's time-traveling ship in which he/she (The Doctor usually takes the regeneration of males) travels with a usually female companion in the show Doctor Who on BBC.
It seems to have infinite rooms with the constant ability to change capacity with a simple switch of a lever or push of a button, as seen in the episode where the Eleventh Doctor makes Amy and Rory's bunk beds one bed and another where he deletes the swimming pool and the library in order to complete a vigorous task.
As Clara Oswald stated in 'The Snowmen,' it is 'smaller on the outside.'
It takes shape as a 1960's police call box, since the chameleon circuit is broken. It has a familiar whirring noise celebrated across the fandom.
The Doctor refers to the TARDIS as 'sexy' when he's alone, since it technically has no name. In 'The Doctor's Wife,' the TARDIS takes the form of a human girl, sacrificed by her 2 other peers to lure in The Doctor.
To the TARDIS!
“Time and relative dimension in space” - As named by The Doctor’s granddaughter Susan.
It is a time machine from the show ᴅᴏᴄᴛᴏʀ ᴡʜᴏ. TT Capsule Mark 3.
The exterior and interior are in two separate dimensions which gives the effect that the interior is bigger than the outside.
“Time and relative dimension in space, or as I like to call it: TARDIS.”
A word to describe something or someone that is lame. Originates from the word tardy to describe unpunctual but is now a HIGHLY POPULAR alternative to the somewhat overused 'lame'
An Irish road worker's workload description in the dimensions of time and space.
Example: I tardis today and I tardis tomorrow.