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Online Slangs & meanings of slangs

Slangs & AI meanings

  • black pill
  • black pill

    Opium pill

  • cronic
  • cronic

    marajuana

  • ITCHY PIGS
  • ITCHY PIGS

    Itchy pigs is British slang for a dish of seasoned pork rind (pork scratchings).

  • Dude
  • Dude

    A way to address someone: Dude, thats totally awesome

  • HUMPY
  • HUMPY

    Humpy is British slang for annoyed, resentful. Humpy is Australian slang for an aboriginal's shack.

  • throw a wicked fuck
  • throw a wicked fuck

    Describes someone that is good in anal intercourse.

  • bar
  • bar

    Any public locale crowded with men that congregated there for sexual purposes.

  • THREE PARTS GONE
  • THREE PARTS GONE

    Three parts gone is British slang for drunk, intocixated.

  • PANAMA CUT
  • PANAMA CUT

    marijuana

  • gordon bennett
  • gordon bennett

    Expression of surprise/disbelief. Probably a "concealment" of the Cockney expression "Gawd (God) Almighty". Possibly (but doubtful) also the name of the first British footballer to land a contract for more than a million pounds. John R. writes: I agree with everything about your entry except the provenance of the word. I know a lot about football and the 1st million puond player was Trevor Francis, I have never heard of a player by the name of Gordon Bennet. Besides which, it is a very old expression pre-dating anything like that. This was sent in by Matthew Hill: I remember using the phrase Gordon Bennett quite often in the seventies and eighties whilst I was at school. My mother still uses it occassionally, so I can only surmise that it was a character who was famous at the time. However, there is a Gordon Bennett Memorial Hall in Thurcroft, South Yorkshire (my school was in Dinnington, South Yorkshire) which was built in the mid-eighties. Who it is named after I do not know, but it may provide another launch-pad for further research! (ed: So we still don't know who Gordon Bennett was. Has anyone got any more ideas where the expression came from - or why it originated?)

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