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  • CID
  • CID

    LSD

  • rat-arsed
  • rat-arsed

    adj exceedingly drunk. Also abbreviated as simply ratted. Possibly derived from a time when dead rats would be dangled in cider vats to give them extra flavour. At least, according to the person who told me that.

  • tanked (up)
  • tanked (up)

    Adj. Drunk and in a state rowdiness. E.g."He was tanked up on strong cheap cider and looking for a fight." [Early 1900s]

  • CID
  • CID

    Consider It Done -or- Crying In Disgrace

  • cid
  • cid

    LSD

  • apple catchers
  • apple catchers

    Derogatory term for someone wearing unflattering big underwear. Example: 'that fat old trout had a pair of frilly apple catchers on'. This is a term used in Herefordshire term (west country) and probably comes from this area having a large number of orchards for cider making. Contributor says it must be a old term as his dad and his mates use it and the kids in school used it at school and continue the tradition to this day.

  • Apple Jack
  • Apple Jack

    A liquor distilled from cider, also called cider brandy.

  • Scrumpy
  • Scrumpy

    n strong alcoholic cider. While traditionally the word refers to home-brewed cider (scrumping being the stealing of apples), it has more recently become associated with a high-alcohol brand named Scrumpy Jack. DonÂ’t go near the stuff. I drank some at university one evening and all sorts of bad things happened.

  • Winona Ryder
  • Winona Ryder

    Cider. Can I get two pints of winona please.

  • Easy Rider
  • Easy Rider

    Cider. Pint of Easy Rider please

  • scrump (1)
  • scrump (1)

    To steal apples... as in "You going scrumping tonight??"... "Aye if the old bastard hasn't left the dogs in the orchard!". (ed: there must be some connection between this and the old word for rough cider... i.e. "scrumpy"... so if you know what it is please tell me!!)

  • scally, scallies
  • scally, scallies

    (stereotype) Name for a person who wears lots of sports clothes, often Adidas or Nike, and tend to hang out on streets drinking cider and usually likes to listen to dance music., The scally is a generalisation and usually a degrading word, often the scally isn't aware that they are one, of will at least not admit to it (usually they're not the sharpest tool in the box so probably wouldn't realise anyway. We got a right telling off from 'JG' about the above definition, as you can see below. Trouble is even in the same area, different groups use the same word with a different meaning sometimes the difference is small, sometimes large. We just print 'em as we get 'em. Here's JG's definition. You can decide which definition applies to your area: "Your definition is totally wrong!! The word scally comes from `scallywag´. `Scally´ is directly traceable to the Merseyside area. It denotes a person who is sharp and street wise, perhaps a a small time thief. Or used as an adjective can describe someone who is untrustworthy, but again sharp: `scally builder´. In the mid- seventies a hardcore group of Liverpool supporters followed the team into and all over Europe. Along the way they stole and robbed from many sports goods stores. They brought these goods back to sell and wore them too. Hence the beginning of the `scally´ football fashion which began to spread nationwide in the very early eighties. Regional variations on the word to describe football supporters are easy to give: Manchester, Perry boys; SE, Casuals; Sheffield/ Yorkshire, Townies or Trendies. This most underrated of scenes eventually spliced into the warehouse party scene. The etymology of the word itself can be guessed at by looking at a word which covered the same meaning on Merseyside with an older generation. 'Buck´ or ``Bucko´ meant a young man who was wild and in trouble with the police for relatively petty offences. Its precise etymological history is Irish, brought over by the wave of immigrants into the area. The word is still used by Merseyside Police as a slang term to describe a young male offender of repute. This definition mirrors the meaning of `scally´. Which as a word again has Irish origins. In conclusion your definition is wrong for two reasons:1) You describe scallies as having low intelligence therefore showing an ignorance of this social group 2) Scallies are so famously Liverpudlian I am amazed you could attempt to locate the word as NE That is utter shite!! From reformed scally JG." (ed: thanks for that JG - any comments from alternative viewpoints gratefully received!)

  • Winona Ryder
  • Winona Ryder

    Cider

  • APPLE CIDER
  • APPLE CIDER

    Apple cider is British rhyming slang for spider.

  • (the) Sweeney
  • (the) Sweeney

    Noun. A specialist section of the London Metropolitan Police called the Flying Squad, a branch of the CID. Rhyming slang on Sweeney Todd, meaning Flying Squad.

  • gnats piss, cat's piss
  • gnats piss, cat's piss

    Weak beer or cider. There are rumours some bartenders dilute the beer etc when serving underage kids as they can't complain too loudly and have to keep coming back. Bastards still charge full price though!!

  • cider
  • cider

    n alcoholic apple juice. To Brits all cider is alcoholic — there’s no such thing as “hard cider” in Britain, and any non-alcoholic apple juice is called simply “apple juice.” Cider is often mixed with a small amount of blackcurrant syrup to form a drink imaginatively titled “Cider and black”.

  • meesh
  • meesh

    A 'standing on street corners drinking cider' type of person who goes looking for a fight every 2 minutes as he thinks he's well hard, where as in fact, he's a skinny, scummy little runt. All Meeshes should really be shot or drowned at birth. A Meesh will usually be found in South Wales.

  • turbo-lung
  • turbo-lung

    A kind of bong made out of a 2 litre cider or coke bottle with the bottom cut off and replaced with a plastic bag or cling film attatched with tape and a gauze instead of a lid, then what is done, marajuana is burnt on the gauze and the bag is pulled down, then the gauze is removed and the smoke inhaled

  • CIDG
  • CIDG

    (Sidgee) Civilian Irregular Defense Group. Pg. 506

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  • Sillabub
  • n.

    A dish made by mixing wine or cider with milk, and thus forming a soft curd; also, sweetened cream, flavored with wine and beaten to a stiff froth.

  • Sicer
  • n.

    A strong drink; cider.

  • Make
  • v. t.

    To become; to be, or to be capable of being, changed or fashioned into; to do the part or office of; to furnish the material for; as, he will make a good musician; sweet cider makes sour vinegar; wool makes warm clothing.

  • Ciderkin
  • n.

    A kind of weak cider made by steeping the refuse pomace in water.

  • Perry
  • n.

    A fermented liquor made from pears; pear cider.

  • Turn
  • v. t.

    To make acid or sour; to ferment; to curdle, etc.: as, to turn cider or wine; electricity turns milk quickly.

  • Swig
  • v. t.

    To drink in long draughts; to gulp; as, to swig cider.

  • October
  • n.

    Ale or cider made in that month.

  • Pomade
  • n.

    Cider.

  • Redstreak
  • n.

    Cider pressed from redstreak apples.

  • Redstreak
  • n.

    A kind of apple having the skin streaked with red and yellow, -- a favorite English cider apple.

  • Vinegar
  • a.

    A sour liquid used as a condiment, or as a preservative, and obtained by the spontaneous (acetous) fermentation, or by the artificial oxidation, of wine, cider, beer, or the like.

  • Mill
  • n.

    A machine used for expelling the juice, sap, etc., from vegetable tissues by pressure, or by pressure in combination with a grinding, or cutting process; as, a cider mill; a cane mill.

  • Roil
  • v.

    To render turbid by stirring up the dregs or sediment of; as, to roil wine, cider, etc. , in casks or bottles; to roil a spring.

  • Sider
  • n.

    Cider.

  • Pupelo
  • n.

    Cider brandy.

  • Ciderist
  • n.

    A maker of cider.

  • Tang
  • n.

    A strong or offensive taste; especially, a taste of something extraneous to the thing itself; as, wine or cider has a tang of the cask.

  • Underleaf
  • n.

    A prolific sort of apple, good for cider.

  • Siser
  • n.

    Cider. See Sicer.

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