Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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ir, You Bastard choose

Quotation Text

[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 172: Don’t fuck me about, jack.
at fuck about, v.
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 202: You’re buggering me about.
at bugger about, v.
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 124: You’ve sweet FA to lose anyway.
at sweet Fanny Adams, n.
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 92: There’s FA wrong with my morals.
at fanny adams, n.2
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 145: The man appeared to be all arse.
at arse, n.
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 75: A villain they’d helped put away.
at put away, v.
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 11: An incident which led him to the DCS’s office for axing.
at axe, v.
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 156: The occasional bad egg turns up.
at bad egg (n.) under bad, adj.
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 118: You’re involved way over your ballocks.
at ballocks, n.
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 224: That’s ballocks [...] I apply myself.
at ballocks, n.
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 7: A blatant denial [...] was standard when caught bang to rights.
at bang to rights (adv.) under bang, adv.
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 144: They had cautioned her twice [...] for bashing.
at bashing, n.
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 136: Atkinson wouldn’t bend now at any price.
at bend, v.2
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 61: The two rooms held nothing bent.
at bent, adj.
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 61: I always run when Old Bill’s around.
at Old Bill, n.
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 179: I don’t keep that sort of dough in m’bin.
at bin, n.
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 30: What did you do, put the black on the other four?
at put the black on (v.) under black, n.
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 71: A blag was done up the road.
at blag, n.
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 208: We were [...] getting treated like bleeding wog brush salesmen.
at bleeding, adj.
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 117: [He] hoped the man was a blind.
at blind, n.1
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 202: What’ll you do, blow him out?
at blow someone out, v.
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 139: He’s probably blowing in his strides with relief.
at blow, v.1
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 72: They had a crime and needed a body.
at body, n.
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 90: I’m booking it that he’ll collect it on his way to work.
at book, v.1
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 62: Go on, put the boot in.
at put the boot in (v.) under boot, the, n.
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 43: A couple of brasses would have to be found later.
at brass, n.2
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 163: A DI moving with the brass was of infinitely more value.
at brass, n.1
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 87: He was reputed to have more brown-hats in high places.
at brown-hatter, n.
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 229: James has been pulled for bunging.
at bung, v.1
[UK] G.F. Newman Sir, You Bastard 192: His proposed bung had no bearing on Sneed seeing them [i.e. rules] enforced.
at bung, n.1
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