Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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Kings Road choose

Quotation Text

[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 96: You stay around and have a good loon [...] the party’s just beginning.
at loon (about/off), v.
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 158: He’d been given a mind-bending drug.
at mind-bending, adj.
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 145: I fancy getting blocked. Got any grass?
at blocked, adj.
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 102: Why shouldn’t we say ‘hello’ on the blower?
at blower, n.2
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 78: The walls of his bar are covered with bounced cheques.
at bounce, v.2
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 196: I’ll watch the box.
at box, n.1
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 109: Don’t bring me down, darling [...] I’m high and happy, let’s groove.
at bring down, v.1
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 212: I’ve had a terrible bust-up with Edward.
at bust-up, n.
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 102: How are the Chelsea chicks?
at chick, n.1
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 237: I’m not having my kid born a junkie. When you’re clean you get the gold band.
at clean, adj.
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 97: I take it you two made a great connexion last night.
at connection, n.
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 211: Get over here fast, and cool that shit talk!
at cool, v.2
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 98: I was terrified of getting pregnant [...] but the curse has just come on.
at curse, the, n.1
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 80: ‘I know she’ll bore you but just treat her as a joke.’ ‘She’s a real drag doll’ moaned CB.
at drag, adj.2
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 200: It’s those dusky gentlemen I’m worrried about.
at dusky, adj.
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 210: With the efficiency of a regular fixer, Helen melted a tablet with distilled water.
at fixer, n.2
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 89: Take a look at the local bird life [...] No wonder they’ve flipped over us!
at flip, v.4
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 98: We had the wildest freak-out last night.
at freak-out, n.
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 94: ‘Everyone’s freaking out,’ said Brad, ‘shall we join them?’ They stood and joined the dancing bodies.
at freak out, v.
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 95: ‘This is a freaky spliff,’ said Les, holding the joint out to Tricesta.
at freaky, adj.1
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 160: I funk Women’s Lib.
at funk, v.2
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 145: I often go for a gang bang but I just like to know the scene first.
at gangbang, n.
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 230: Instead of gassing all night you should be preparing yourselves.
at gas, v.1
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 149: Did you groove?
at groove, v.
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 106: Cool it – the fuzz are concentrating on the Grove.
at Grove, the, n.
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 195: I’m not anxious to run into a bunch of spade heavies.
at heavy, n.
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 192: ‘Cool it man,’ said Edward, ‘she’s high.’.
at high, adj.1
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 85: She’s hung up on CB, it’s getting to be a bore.
at hung up on under hung up, adj.
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 216: Are you still on the hustle?
at on the hustle under hustle, n.
[UK] M. Novotny Kings Road 167: The King’s Road at 6 am was not the jumping, freaky scene of a sunny afternoon.
at jumping, adj.2
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