Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] ‘You give us a few answers and you can have this. No fucking about; it’s all yours’.
at fuck about, v.
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] ‘All of you, take your fancy club and shove it up your arses’.
at shove it up your arse!, excl.
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] [H]e was a good-enough kid, amazed by everything he was told (‘Awesome!’).
at awesome!, excl.
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] Davie was always a sucker for the BFF act.
at B.F.F., n.
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] Her husband [...] Total dish and a real gentleman, I can’t think how Emma bagged him.
at bag, v.
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] ‘That bollocks, he’s useless’.
at ballocks, n.
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] ‘I’ve never heard you apologise before.’ ‘Bollocks’.
at ballocks!, excl.
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] ‘[H]alf the blokes what ever represented me should of been banged up’.
at banged up, adj.2
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] [H]e’d found out nothing more than Oscar Druitt was a bender.
at bender, n.1
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] Who did this old biddy think she was?
at biddy, n.2
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] ‘These people aren’t big shots, they’re just self-promoting morons’.
at big shot, n.
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] ‘Pete’s so-called mates are always blowing him out’.
at blow out, v.1
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] ‘[Y]ou go and enjoy this bleeding little backwater and talk to all the bogans who live here’.
at bogan, n.
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] ’I’m going to have some more bubbles; do you want a glass?’.
at bubbly, n.
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] ‘You chose the wrong crowd [...] Bugger off!’.
at bugger off!, excl.
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] ‘What’s the latest with buggerlugs, anyway?’.
at buggerlugs, n.
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] ‘Davie, where on earth are you? You’re bunking off work again, aren’t you?’.
at bunk (off) (v.) under bunk, v.1
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] A good burn, he’d explained [...] was a fast burn.
at burn, n.1
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] Angus and some friends were meeting in a restaurant in the Cross.
at Cross, the, n.
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] ‘Nice girl, or a bit of a gold-digger, depending on who you talk to’.
at gold-digger, n.1
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] Her husband [...] Total dish and a real gentleman, I can’t think how Emma bagged him.
at dish, n.1
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] She was as ditzy as — that’s what all the locals said.
at ditzy, adj.2
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] Film it and get Murdoch done for GBH.
at done, adj.
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] ‘My boyfriend’s on earlies and I want to have his dinner ready for when he gets home’.
at earlies, n.
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] ‘He’s probably at some fancy-pants party’.
at fancy pants, adj.
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] ‘I can’t fart without half of Montie knowing about it’.
at fart, v.
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] ‘Henry Arnold James Umpton, sir! “Flash” to my friends. Too flash for my enemies, aha’.
at flash, adj.
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] ‘Where’s Flash Harry then?’.
at flash harry (n.) under flash, adj.
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] He’d flunked his exams and dropped out.
at flunk, v.
[Aus] G. Gilmore Class Act [ebook] ‘Zach was supposed to get freebies in the member’s stand’.
at freebie, n.
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