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  • Noob 
  • Noob 

    Noob 

    (n.) A derogatory term for a player whose playing style is considered immature and/or whose lack of knowledge is voluntary and beyond mere ignorance.

  • borstal whack
  • borstal whack

    borstal whack

    The action of striking someone on the head, often in the playground, with your knuckles. This was commonly administered along with the bumps on someones birthday or more often merely as a means of inflicting pain.

  • FLAKE
  • FLAKE

    FLAKE

    Flake is American slang for an eccentric or crazy person. Flake is Australian slang for shark meat.Flake is American slang for cocaine.Flake is American slang for an arrest made merely to meet a quota, or satisfy public opinion.

  • Bootox
  • Bootox

    Bootox

    (ed: entered verbatim - can't edit stuff like this!) No idea how it should be spelt but pronounce it Boo-Docks in low thick Cornish accent. I stress Cornish rather than the Wurzels Somerset burr which the whole of the West Country seem to get labelled with. Shouted with a thumbs up and outward motion ( as opposed to merely aloft ) to express joy at a particularly spectacular marble shot. i.e. better than 'ace' or 's-kill'., 1976-1980 I remember Paul Bonner using first. Parc Eglos (field by the church) Primary School Helston Cornwall.

  • Ah'mer! I'm telling off you.
  • Ah'mer! I'm telling off you.

    Ah'mer! I'm telling off you.

    Sheer terror could be instilled to anyone in the contributors school, By one simple shout-aloud sentence: Ah'mer! I'm telling off you! Whence the girl who's pencil sharpener you'd just borrowed but because it was made in Taiwan, broke in contact with with the merest pressure of hand, so young girl would wander off to teacher after saying that immortal line. This was mid-80's, the arse end of the capital punishment era, which meant your bot was slapped and you were made to stand with your back to the class until dinner, which in this case was a very long time! The case in hand happened early that morning. and the word and that humiliation can still be felt 17 years later!

  • Sexual Objectification
  • Sexual Objectification

    Sexual Objectification

    The attitude of treating others simply as sex object, sexual partners, or mere vehicles for sensual or ego gratification. sexual objectification as a concept has been traced to the German philosopher Immanuel Kant (1726-1804).

  • kickin' it
  • kickin' it

    kickin' it

    v. To relax, usually with ones friends. To merely exist, usually with no work involved.  "Where are you going Billy?" "Just kickin' it with my friends!" 

  • stinger
  • stinger

    stinger

    An exclamation used to acknowledge the pain or anguish of a second party, though often that pain may well have been brought about by the first party themselves. For example, when changing after PE, when some amount of bare skin was inevitable, a person might issue a resounding and painful slap to the bare back of a contemporary, leaving a large red hand mark and bringing about a squeal of pain. "Stinger!" the slapper might then say, as if to sympathise with their agony. It was also used to acknowledge pain that was merely witnessed, not caused. Say, for example, if you saw someone go over their handle bars at 30mph or take a cricket ball full pelt to the bridge of the nose, "Stinger!" you'd announce, with a heavy emphasis on the first syllable. "Stinger" was also used in constructions such as: "Stinger for you!" and the stranger "Stinger for YOUR head!!!".

  • johnny metgod
  • johnny metgod

    johnny metgod

    Johnny Metgod played for Nottingham Forest in the mid-80s. He scored one of the most stunningly-hit free kicks ever seen in English football against West Ham United. Hammers goalkeeper Phil Parkes didn't even see the shot, even though the ball was motionless when it was struck from no less than 40 yards from goal. I think it won goal of the season. It remains one of the hardest strikes of a ball any of my generation can remember. To merely call it a corker would be an insult, and the word 'legendary' is only just adequate. More on this - seems we touched a nerve!: Johnny Metgod was a midfielder/defender rather than a striker, although he scored some cracking free kicks. He did play in the 1982 world cup in Spain, but Holland didn't qualify for the 1986 finals in Mexico.He was most familiar to English kids as he plied his trade in England at Nottinghan Forest and then at Tottenham Hotspur (80s).

  • SHOO-FLY
  • SHOO-FLY

    SHOO-FLY

    Temporary track, usually built around a flooded area, a wreck, or other obstacle; sometimes built merely to facilitate a rerailing

  • maw (yer ...)
  • maw (yer ...)

    maw (yer ...)

    Pronounced, 'yer-maw' as in 'claw'. This is a classic riposte when one's string of stand-by retorts has been exhausted. The always effective 'thing to say when there is nothing else to say' and in that way it is very much the supercalifragilisticexpealidocious of the scruffy playground. When stuck for a witty rejoinder merely resort to "Oh aye...yer maw". An eternal argument winner. Is often countered with subsequent elaborations "Aye...you're maw";"Yer fuckin' maw";and the endlessly creative and enigmatic "Aye...yer maw's baws!" (ed: for the unenlightened, maw = mother, baw = balls)

  • gammor
  • gammor

    gammor

    (Gammar) grandmother; french for grande-mere

  • beppo, bep
  • beppo, bep

    beppo, bep

    Also 'bep'. A derogatory term indicating that the subject of the remark is, basically, a dirty vagabond, although merely having the wrong brand of trainers is enough to prompt this remark in most South Wales schools. The term reputedly derives from a tramp of that name who lived in the Cardiff area of South Wales in the early eighties. Despite the fact that the poor man has long since passed away, I have heard children as far away as Newport using the insult "ah, yer bep", and in the town of Barry (nearer Cardiff) "Your mum shagged Beppo" is still a fairly common playground insult, even though no-one of that age knows who Beppo was (or, hopefully, what 'shagged' means). (ed: actually, despite the assertion he had carked it long ago, I was informed by "Mel" in Dinas Powis, Wales, that Beppo was alive and kicking at least up until Sept. 1999)

  • bedlamer
  • bedlamer

    bedlamer

    a two-year old harp seal, said to be corrupted (from the French meaning “Bete de la mere,”) or beast of the sea. An immature seal, especially a harp seal, approaching breeding age.  Also, a youth approaching manhood.

  • ned
  • ned

    ned

    a guinea. A slang word used in Britain and chiefly London from around 1750-1850. Ned was seemingly not pluralised when referring to a number of guineas, eg., 'It'll cost you ten ned..' A half-ned was half a guinea. The slang ned appears in at least one of Bruce Alexander's Blind Justice series of books (thanks P Bostock for raising this) set in London's Covent Garden area and a period of George III's reign from around 1760 onwards. It is conceivable that the use also later transferred for a while to a soverign and a pound, being similar currency units, although I'm not aware of specific evidence of this. The ned slang word certainly transferred to America, around 1850, and apparently was used up to the 1920s. In the US a ned was a ten dollar gold coin, and a half-ned was a five dollar coin. Precise origin of the word ned is uncertain although it is connected indirectly (by Chambers and Cassells for example) with a straightforward rhyming slang for the word head (conventional ockney rhyming slang is slightly more complex than this), which seems plausible given that the monarch's head appeared on guinea coins. Ned was traditionally used as a generic name for a man around these times, as evidenced by its meaning extending to a thuggish man or youth, or a petty criminal (US), and also a reference (mainly in the US) to the devil, (old Ned, raising merry Ned, etc). These, and the rhyming head connection, are not factual origins of how ned became a slang money term; they are merely suggestions of possible usage origin and/or reinforcement.

  • minter
  • minter

    minter

    At school there was a red haired lad who complained that he was being called ginger minger. The teacher, seemingly unaware of what a minge was and slightly hard of hearing, was nevertheless outraged by the upset caused to this boy and held a special assembly n the school hall. He said that it was no longer acceptable to refer to red haired pupils as 'ginger minters'. As a result the word Minter immediately became the most popular word in the school, being used with gay abandon at anyone who had even the merest hint of ginger in their hair. To my knowledge this term of abuse travelled to a number of universities when the boys in that year left school.

  • Beauty
  • Beauty

    Beauty

    – The best possible Pirate address for a woman. Always preceded by “me,” as in, “C’mere, me beauty,” or even, “me buxom beauty,” to one particularly well endowed. You’ll be surprised how effective this is.

  • Who in the name of the Great Prairie Winds…
  • Who in the name of the Great Prairie Winds…

    Who in the name of the Great Prairie Winds…

    This interrogative was used by a shopkeeper when Merei Spanjaf told him she was sent by Bandis Yong.

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Online Slangs & meanings

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  • Snowed
  • Snowed

    To be on drugs (heroin? cocaine?); also “snowed up”

  • chatarra (spanish)
  • chatarra (spanish)

    Heroin

  • TRIPLE CANOPY
  • TRIPLE CANOPY

    thick jungle, plants growing at 3 levels - ground level, intermediate, and high levels.

  • CHEVY CHASE
  • CHEVY CHASE

    Chevy Chase is London Cockney rhyming slang for face.

  • pink beard
  • pink beard

    As per 'chin on'. The implication being a beard of skin (a bald chin). Often used thus: "Mmm, and I've got a pink beard",

  • drit
  • drit

    used as past tense of drive. The wind carried away my sail and so I drit across the bay

  • hang-up
  • hang-up

    Noun. An emotional problem, a psychological disturbance. E.g."He needs counselling to sort out his hang-ups."

  • CIRCLE
  • CIRCLE

    Circle is old British slang for the vagina.

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  • Rush
  • n.

    The merest trifle; a straw.

  • Meretricious
  • a.

    Of or pertaining to prostitutes; having to do with harlots; lustful; as, meretricious traffic.

  • Verbality
  • n.

    The quality or state of being verbal; mere words; bare literal expression.

  • Rote
  • n.

    A frequent repetition of forms of speech without attention to the meaning; mere repetition; as, to learn rules by rote.

  • Un-
  • adv.

    An inseparable prefix, or particle, signifying not; in-; non-. In- is prefixed mostly to words of Latin origin, or else to words formed by Latin suffixes; un- is of much wider application, and is attached at will to almost any adjective, or participle used adjectively, or adverb, from which it may be desired to form a corresponding negative adjective or adverb, and is also, but less freely, prefixed to nouns. Un- sometimes has merely an intensive force; as in unmerciless, unremorseless.

  • Un-
  • adv.

    Those which have acquired an opposed or contrary, instead of a merely negative, meaning; as, unfriendly, ungraceful, unpalatable, unquiet, and the like; or else an intensive sense more than a prefixed not would express; as, unending, unparalleled, undisciplined, undoubted, unsafe, and the like.

  • Meresman
  • n.

    An officer who ascertains meres or boundaries.

  • Virtuosity
  • n.

    The quality or state of being a virtuoso; in a bad sense, the character of one in whom mere artistic feeling or aesthetic cultivation takes the place of religious character; sentimentalism.

  • Routine
  • n.

    Any regular course of action or procedure rigidly adhered to by the mere force of habit.

  • Meretricious
  • a.

    Resembling the arts of a harlot; alluring by false show; gaudily and deceitfully ornamental; tawdry; as, meretricious dress or ornaments.

  • Voice
  • n.

    Sound of the kind or quality heard in speech or song in the consonants b, v, d, etc., and in the vowels; sonant, or intonated, utterance; tone; -- distinguished from mere breath sound as heard in f, s, sh, etc., and also whisper.

  • Mere
  • Superl.

    Only this, and nothing else; such, and no more; simple; bare; as, a mere boy; a mere form.

  • Topical
  • n.

    Resembling a topic, or general maxim; hence, not demonstrative, but merely probable, as an argument.

  • Rytina
  • n.

    A genus of large edentulous sirenians, allied to the dugong and manatee, including but one species (R. Stelleri); -- called also Steller's sea cow. S () the nineteenth letter of the English alphabet, is a consonant, and is often called a sibilant, in allusion to its hissing sound. It has two principal sounds; one a mere hissing, as in sack, this; the other a vocal hissing (the same as that of z), as in is, wise. Besides these it sometimes has the sounds of sh and zh, as in sure, measure. It generally has its hissing sound at the beginning of words, but in the middle and at the end of words its sound is determined by usage. In a few words it is silent, as in isle, debris. With the letter h it forms the digraph sh. See Guide to pronunciation, // 255-261.

  • Terminus
  • n.

    The Roman divinity who presided over boundaries, whose statue was properly a short pillar terminating in the bust of a man, woman, satyr, or the like, but often merely a post or stone stuck in the ground on a boundary line.

  • Town
  • adv. & prep.

    Formerly: (a) An inclosure which surrounded the mere homestead or dwelling of the lord of the manor. [Obs.] (b) The whole of the land which constituted the domain. [Obs.] (c) A collection of houses inclosed by fences or walls.

  • Tropist
  • n.

    One who deals in tropes; specifically, one who avoids the literal sense of the language of Scripture by explaining it as mere tropes and figures of speech.

  • Thing
  • n.

    A diminutive or slighted object; any object viewed as merely existing; -- often used in pity or contempt.

  • Turret
  • n.

    A little tower, frequently a merely ornamental structure at one of the angles of a larger structure.

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