Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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Bloody January choose

Quotation Text

[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 238: ‘You really think I’d fuck you about?’.
at fuck about, v.
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 60: Dope, acid, any shite she can get.
at acid, n.1
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 44: ‘That cunt Agnotti pays us fuck all’.
at fuck all, n.
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 184: ‘[W]hat it sounds like is the square root of fuck all to me’.
at square root of fuck-all (n.) under fuck all, n.
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 35: ‘Nairn was an animal. He asked you to touch your toes you’d do it, say thanks afterwards’.
at animal, n.1
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 61: McCoy thought he was a prick and Raeburn thought he was a smart arse.
at smart-arse, n.
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 250: ‘Good mind to tell him to shove it up his arse’.
at shove it up your arse!, excl.
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 37: ‘Quite happy doing nothing but parking his arse in front of The Magic Roundabout’.
at arse, n.
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 162: Row of old men [...] propping up the bar, talking arse.
at arse, n.
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 36: McCoy pushed the other shoe off with his foot, couldn’t be arsed with the laces.
at arsed, adj.
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 34: ‘Queer as a three-bob bit and didnae care who knew’.
at ...a nine-bob note under queer as..., adj.
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 2: He took a roll-up out his baccy tin and lit up.
at bacca-box (n.) under bacca, n.
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 157: Knew Murray would go ballistic if he heard he was up.
at go ballistic (v.) under ballistic, adj.
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 153: You saw Murray going bananas, all it took was one phone call.
at go bananas (v.) under bananas, adj.
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 87: [He] woke up with a banging hangover and an empty half bottle beside him.
at banging, adj.
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 62: ‘[Y]ou can beat it before I call Murray’.
at beat it, v.
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 241: ‘[Y]ou’re just another bent copper. A bent copper I would happily have got rid of’.
at bent, adj.
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 38: [of a homosexual copuple] ‘Someone’ll have to tell Bobby, by the way.’ ‘Bobby?’ [...] ‘His faithful other half’.
at better half, n.
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 126: [He] stuck his half bottle of red biddy into her hand [...] ‘Bit much of the biddy, eh?’.
at red biddy (n.) under biddy, n.2
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 62: [A] queue of old biddies waiting at the bus stop.
at biddy, n.2
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 20: [of police] Old mucker of Murray’s at the Greenock shop had called him, said he had a bright boy [...] should be up in Glasgow playing with the big boys.
at big boy, n.
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 101: ‘Davey Waters?’ McCoy nodded. ‘And the hair of the dog that bit my arse last night’.
at hair of the dog (that bit one), n.
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 279: Radiators had gone on the blink; some pipe had burst with the cold.
at on the blink (adj.) under blink, n.1
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 239: [She] was later murdered by a bloke who worked for Lord Dunlop.
at bloke, n.
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 48: ‘Aye sure, shot him in the boat. Sounds great’.
at boat, n.2
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 80: He gave the Afghan coat bloke a bomber, took the last one himself.
at bomber, n.1
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 78: [W]orking his way through a handful of Black Bombers.
at black bomber (n.) under bomber, n.1
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 210: ‘[M]aybe you just want to jump my bones?’.
at jump (on) someone’s bones (v.) under bones, n.1
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 38: ‘Worked at Malmaison, on the verge of getting the boot it seems’.
at boot, the, n.
[Scot] A. Parks Bloody January 88: No wonder he’d got out his box last night.
at out of one’s box (adj.) under box, n.3
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