Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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Alfie Darling choose

Quotation Text

[UK] B. Naughton Alfie Darling 220: Have a little rabbit with them, listen to their troubles.
at rabbit (and pork), v.
[UK] B. Naughton Alfie Darling 272: It suddenly struck me what a slobass I was to bother.
at -ass, sfx
[UK] B. Naughton Alfie Darling 201: ‘I’ll finish you off,’ I said, ‘if you open your great ugly beezer once more.’.
at beezer, n.1
[UK] B. Naughton Alfie Darling 140: I don’t want to blot my copybook in a strange place.
at blot one’s copybook, v.
[UK] B. Naughton Alfie Darling 185: I’d this Abby on my mind, see. Not that she’s a boiling piece. But she’s got this extra thing.
at boiling, adj.
[UK] B. Naughton Alfie Darling 198: You’re a real hot little lustbox, ain’t you.
at box, n.1
[UK] B. Naughton Alfie Darling 133: I left all the bunging to Bakey. Well, you don’t want two of you handing out tips.
at bung, v.1
[UK] B. Naughton Alfie Darling 167: ‘Look here, darling,’ I said, dead casual and chirpy.
at chirpy, adj.
[UK] B. Naughton Alfie Darling 31: If a man’s cocking a woman regular she can’t give him enough to eat. [Ibid.] 147: She’s definitely determined to have me cock her.
at cock, v.1
[UK] B. Naughton Alfie Darling 191: A bleeding great ugly big Rolls comes drawing up alongside. In it was one fat, over-fed cowson.
at cowson, n.
[UK] B. Naughton Alfie Darling 186: I definitely had to have a piece of cracker.
at cracker, n.9
[UK] B. Naughton Alfie Darling 179: I start cleaning and shaping this rose [...] like you see these barrow-boys dolling up their lettuce.
at doll up, v.
[UK] B. Naughton Alfie Darling 138: It was a proper sit-downer with your feet under the table.
at sit-down, n.
[UK] Naughton Alfie Darling 181: What nicer situation is there [...] than that of a bloke flamming up a bird and she’s enjoying it and they’re both looking forward to a good lay.
at flam, v.
[UK] B. Naughton Alfie Darling 143: I was behaving a bit humpty with her for a start, sort of grunting instead of talking.
at humpty, adj.1
[UK] B. Naughton Alfie Darling 186: It hardly seemed worth it to go and visit her just for a bit of nukky.
at nookie, n.
[UK] B. Naughton Alfie Darling 196: Once I know I’m going to get my oats for certain I like to exert this final bit of self-discipline.
at get one’s oats (v.) under oats, n.2
[UK] Bill Naughton Alfie Darling I asked her would she like a sluice? She wasn’t quite sure what I meant.
at sluice, n.
[UK] B. Naughton Alfie Darling 152: There does seem something missing so far as sparking a bloke goes.
at spark, v.1
[UK] B. Naughton Alfie Darling 173: Did you give her the works — the full treatment?
at give someone the works (v.) under works, the, n.
[UK] B. Naughton Alfie Darling 195: The worst thing that could happen to me would be that I’d get laid out before I got my bit of twot.
at twat, n.
[UK] B. Naughton Alfie Darling 199: Good old Twotface.
at twat, n.
[UK] B. Naughton Alfie Darling 198: You’re a real hot little lustbox, ain’t you, Twitface.
at twit, n.
[UK] B. Naughton Alfie Darling 196: I mean you even begin to wonder is this bird worth this marvellous thing you’re going to unload.
at unload, v.
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