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Train orders from the dispatcher
n a game in which two combatants, each armed with the nut-shaped seed of a horse chestnut tree on a string, take turns to whack the opponent's nut with theirs until one breaks. Yes, it's a little odd. Yes, there is very little skill involved. Let me know if you have any other questions.
To get out of the place ["make ghost, gay bashers are coming!"] make out.
Baked beans
Helping a Brother Out
- This is another fairly unique word with no real American equivalent. Like bloody it has many uses apart from the obvious dictionary one pertaining to rather unusual sexual habits. My father was always shouting "bugger" when he was working in the garage or garden. Usually when he hit his thumb or dropped a nail or lost something. Today we might use the sh** or the f*** words but bugger is still as common. The fuller version of this would be "bugger it". It can also be used to tell someone to get lost (bugger off), or to admit defeat (we're buggered) or if you were tired or exhausted you would be buggered. You can also call someone a bugger. When I won £10 on the lottery my mate called me a "lucky bugger".
n. the rubber strip placed inside the rim to protect the tube from the nipples.
Knocked over, defeated, astounded, suddenly surprised.
Sea dust is American slang for salt.
Boracic lint is London Cockney rhyming slang for skint (broke, without money).
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