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Online Slangs & meanings of slangs

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  • FAIR GOES
  • FAIR GOES

    Fair goes is an Australian slang interjection demanding fair or reasonable behaviour.

  • Crayola
  • Crayola

    Black people are colored, as in crayons.

  • FLARE
  • FLARE

    illumination projectile. Pg. 510

  • Hard Case
  • Hard Case

    a difficult parson

  • SEXTON BLAKE
  • SEXTON BLAKE

    Sexton Blake is London Cockney rhyming slang for cake.Sexton Blake is London Cockney rhyming slang for a forgery (fake).

  • k/K
  • k/K

    a thousand (£1,000 or $1,000). From the 1960s, becoming widely used in the 1970s. Plural uses singular form. 'K' has now mainly replaced 'G' in common speech and especially among middle and professional classes. While some etymology sources suggest that 'k' (obviously pronounced 'kay') is from business-speak and underworld language derived from the K abbreviation of kilograms, kilometres, I am inclined to prefer the derivation (suggested to me by Terry Davies) that K instead originates from computer-speak in the early 1970s, from the abbreviation of kilobytes. For Terry's detailed and fascinating explanation of the history of K see the ' K' entry on the cliches and words origins page.

  • DRUM AND FIFE
  • DRUM AND FIFE

    Drum and fife is British military rhyming slang for a knife. Drum and fife is London Cockney rhyming slang for wife.

  • Alert 5
  • Alert 5

    A manned aircraft can launch within five minutes. The Navy has time restrictions as to how long a crew can stand an Alert5 watch. Similarly, Alert 15, Alert 30, Alert 60.

  • BINNIE HALE
  • BINNIE HALE

    Binnie Hale is London Cockney rhyming slang for a confidence trickster's story (tale).

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