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Slangs & AI meanings
Mockingly of yourself or others. i.e. damn, i've pulled a cuntrill again. Like in the episode of the Simpsons where Homer saves the powerplant by accident and gets away with it luckily - only bad, in this case. Entered common use after use in a mis-spelt caption in a local newspaper, became South Yorkshire wide slang for 'screwing up'. Usage: "Oh, no! i've pulled a cuntrill!", "It's all gone cuntrill shaped!". Is now EXTREMELY popular through-out Sheffield and Derbyshire!, It was developed following reporting of the drunken antics of someone called Cantrill, were captured by a bewildered local newspaper photographer and the caption was rather humourously mis-spelled! (ed: would someone like to expand on this please?)
Noun. A person from Sheffield. Derogatory term, taken from the way they speak in Sheffield. [Yorks/Derbyshire use]
Entered more or less verbatim: me and my friends have started to use the 'spam-purse'. It is another word for a womens vagina. there is a game we play where we in turn yell it out in turn each time getting louder. we are between the ages of 14 and 16 and we bought your book after a shopping expedition in Derby and in waterstones when an old women asked if we knew of a book that was an alternative dictionary, we found yours and gave it to her. after she bought it we read through a few pages and were laughing are heads off especially at sack whack which we hadnt heard befor but it became a common occurance to use it. we are very sorry to that old women who we dont think really wanted that book.
Same as "winnets" but justified (according to Geoff Hughes) since there is a "Winnats Pass" in Castleton, Derbyshire, UK which is the home of several winnat infested sheep - and who am I to argue?? However, Sean Winklereed tells me this is also common in NE USA and CAN!! So there ya go.
Belly. That's the stuff for you Derby Kell; makes you fit and it makes you well .From old cockney song Boiled Beef and Carrots - pronounced Darby.
Belly
Noun. Stomach. Rhyming slang on belly. Also Darby Kelly, and often abbreviated to Derby Kel. [Early 1900s]
Adj. Full of food, sated with food, feeling one has overeaten. E.g."I had a five course meal and was too podged to walk." Cf. 'pogged'. [Derbyshire/Yorks/Notts use]
Noun. Chewing gum. [Derbyshire use]
Derby brights is London Cockney rhyming slang for lights.
Noun. Bicycle. [Derbyshire use]
Derby is Black−American slang for oral sex.
(1) A wanker in the insulting form of the word, as in "Ha you're a dobber" (2) a glass marble of around 25mm in diameter, and so around twice the size of the more usual sized variety. (3) a condom (term popularly used in Leicester and Surrounds. (4) In the Derby area of the UK during the 50's and 60's this was the popular name for a catapult - does this suggest that the folks in Leicester were hard put to find elastic for their weapons? (5) A person of questionable common sense. Example "whit'd ye dae that fur, ya fuckin' dobber!".
PERTEMPS DERBY
later the colt started odds on favourite against four opponents in the pertemps Derby Trial Stakes at Lingfield Park. After tracking the leader Entertainer
Light". The Independent. May 8, 1999. Retrieved September 21, 2011. "Pertemps Derby Trial Stakes result". Racing Post. May 8, 1999. Retrieved January 27
rebranding, adopting the alias Pertemps Bees for league and marketing purposes, following a five year sponsorship deal with the Pertemps Group (an employment agency)
Represented Wales at under-21 level. Formerly played for Northampton and Pertemps Bees. Signed for Ulster 2007. Made one appearance from the bench against
permanent home at Billesley Common. The Solihull-based Birmingham & Solihull Pertemps Bees was established in 1989. The first ever speedway meeting in Birmingham
original on 20 August 2008. Retrieved 27 November 2009. "Pertemps sponsors international cricket". Pertemps. Archived from the original on 23 December 2009. Retrieved
redevelopment of the course. Sluser, John. "Cheltenham Racecourse". Greyhound Derby. Retrieved 4 March 2023. "Cheltenham Racecourse Guide". British Racecourses
) "1942 Gold Cup". Derby Daily Telegraph. 21 March 1942. Retrieved 22 November 2015.(Subscription required.) "1945 Gold Cup". Derby Daily Telegraph. 17
Hurdle Race". Derby Daily Telegraph. 10 March 1925. Retrieved 15 November 2015.(Subscription required.) "1926 Stayers Selling Hurdle Race". Derby Daily Telegraph
Ryanair Mares' Novices' Hurdle Jack Richards Novices' Limited Handicap Chase Pertemps Final Ryanair Chase Stayers' Hurdle TrustATrader Plate Handicap Chase Fulke
PERTEMPS DERBY
Mockingly of yourself or others. i.e. damn, i've pulled a cuntrill again. Like in the episode of the Simpsons where Homer saves the powerplant by accident and gets away with it luckily - only bad, in this case. Entered common use after use in a mis-spelt caption in a local newspaper, became South Yorkshire wide slang for 'screwing up'. Usage: "Oh, no! i've pulled a cuntrill!", "It's all gone cuntrill shaped!". Is now EXTREMELY popular through-out Sheffield and Derbyshire!, It was developed following reporting of the drunken antics of someone called Cantrill, were captured by a bewildered local newspaper photographer and the caption was rather humourously mis-spelled! (ed: would someone like to expand on this please?)
Noun. A person from Sheffield. Derogatory term, taken from the way they speak in Sheffield. [Yorks/Derbyshire use]
Entered more or less verbatim: me and my friends have started to use the 'spam-purse'. It is another word for a womens vagina. there is a game we play where we in turn yell it out in turn each time getting louder. we are between the ages of 14 and 16 and we bought your book after a shopping expedition in Derby and in waterstones when an old women asked if we knew of a book that was an alternative dictionary, we found yours and gave it to her. after she bought it we read through a few pages and were laughing are heads off especially at sack whack which we hadnt heard befor but it became a common occurance to use it. we are very sorry to that old women who we dont think really wanted that book.
Same as "winnets" but justified (according to Geoff Hughes) since there is a "Winnats Pass" in Castleton, Derbyshire, UK which is the home of several winnat infested sheep - and who am I to argue?? However, Sean Winklereed tells me this is also common in NE USA and CAN!! So there ya go.
Belly. That's the stuff for you Derby Kell; makes you fit and it makes you well .From old cockney song Boiled Beef and Carrots - pronounced Darby.
Belly
Noun. Stomach. Rhyming slang on belly. Also Darby Kelly, and often abbreviated to Derby Kel. [Early 1900s]
Adj. Full of food, sated with food, feeling one has overeaten. E.g."I had a five course meal and was too podged to walk." Cf. 'pogged'. [Derbyshire/Yorks/Notts use]
Noun. Chewing gum. [Derbyshire use]
Derby brights is London Cockney rhyming slang for lights.
Noun. Bicycle. [Derbyshire use]
Derby is Black−American slang for oral sex.
(1) A wanker in the insulting form of the word, as in "Ha you're a dobber" (2) a glass marble of around 25mm in diameter, and so around twice the size of the more usual sized variety. (3) a condom (term popularly used in Leicester and Surrounds. (4) In the Derby area of the UK during the 50's and 60's this was the popular name for a catapult - does this suggest that the folks in Leicester were hard put to find elastic for their weapons? (5) A person of questionable common sense. Example "whit'd ye dae that fur, ya fuckin' dobber!".