Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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The Weir choose

Quotation Text

[UK] C. McPherson The Weir 39: You’re a bollocks.
at ballocks, n.
[UK] C. McPherson Weir 72: jack: It’s out of respect for this place. brendan: It is in my fucking barney respect!
at barney, n.5
[UK] C. McPherson Weir 49: I took a good belt of the bottle, like.
at belt, n.
[UK] C. McPherson Weir 16: I don’t want him using here for that sort of carry on. A married man like him.
at carry-on, n.
[UK] C. McPherson Weir 53: Don’t be giving me that old cod now.
at cod, n.5
[UK] C. McPherson Weir 39: It was only a cod, sure.
at cod, n.5
[UK] C. McPherson Weir 17: Jimmy talking all that crack with Finbar.
at crack, n.1
[UK] C. McPherson The Weir 71: Has about fifteen fucking kids. Dirty bollocks.
at dirty, adj.
[UK] C. McPherson Weir 31: Me buying the drinks like a feckin eejit.
at fecking, adj.
[UK] C. McPherson The Weir 50: And I was all like ‘fuck this’ you know?
at fuck that/this for a lark! (excl.) under fuck, v.
[UK] C. McPherson The Weir 47: She’s a gabber and a talker.
at gabber, n.2
[UK] C. McPherson The Weir 72: Giving out like a couple of old grannies.
at give out, v.
[UK] C. McPherson The Weir 30: Go on out of that you chancer.
at go on!, excl.
[UK] C. McPherson The Weir 16: Patting himself on the back, goodo.
at goodo, adv.
[UK] C. McPherson The Weir 32: You’d spot that big muttonhead anywhere.
at mutton-head, n.
[UK] C. McPherson The Weir 39: Ah she was a header. Looking for attention.
at header, n.
[UK] C. McPherson The Weir 64: Take it easy now, Finbar. Look after yourself.
at take it easy under take it, v.
[UK] C. McPherson The Weir 55: She does be alright on her own, with coming out for an old jar or that.
at jar, n.1
[UK] C. McPherson The Weir 14: Jays, four or five in anyway.
at jay!, excl.
[UK] C. McPherson Weir 44: Yous all think I’m a loolah now.
at loolah, n.
[UK] C. McPherson Weir 73: I’m like some fucking mentler, I do be watching it!
at mentler, n.
[UK] C. McPherson The Weir 23: Don’t be acting the mess.
at mess, n.2
[UK] C. McPherson The Weir 18: Don’t be messing. Come on.
at mess, v.
[UK] C. McPherson The Weir 67: I’d be all catty and bored, and moochy.
at moochy (adj.) under mooch, n.2
[UK] C. McPherson The Weir 16: And there’s you and me, and the Jimmy fella, the muggins’s, the single fellas.
at muggins, n.1
[UK] C. McPherson Weir 2: He put me on to a nice one. We got her at eleven to four.
at nice one, n.
[UK] C. McPherson Weir 56: I was having a good nosy around.
at nose around (n.) under nose, n.
[UK] C. McPherson The Weir 62: Ah stop being an old woman.
at old woman, n.
[UK] C. McPherson Weir 15 : We went for a quick one in the Pot.
at quick one, n.
[UK] C. McPherson Weir 65: Jack, you’ll have a small one, for the road.
at one for the road (n.) under one, n.1
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