Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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Old Liberty choose

Quotation Text

[UK] M. Terry Old Liberty (1962) 113: The Communist Party is dead as a pumpkin in the U.S.
at dead as..., adj.
[UK] M. Terry Old Liberty (1962) 7: It kind of chapped my rear, if you know what I mean.
at chap someone’s ass under ass, n.
[UK] M. Terry Old Liberty (1962) 165: We took 67 straight in to Big D Dallas, Texas.
at Big D, n.
[UK] M. Terry Old Liberty (1962) 218: I worked hard [...] so that evenings I would bulldog the jeep back to the quarters so beat and worn down I would drop into my bunk.
at bulldog, v.
[UK] M. Terry Old Liberty (1962) 7: He just couldn’t see doodle-squat out of one eye.
at doodley-squat, adv.
[UK] M. Terry Old Liberty (1962) 71: I saw him [...] sitting with two dollies. I eased over.
at ease over (v.) under ease, v.2
[UK] M. Terry Old Liberty (1962) 7: This guy was a little faggio.
at fag, n.4
[UK] M. Terry Old Liberty (1962) 21: Say, swell. Or did we tongue it, big frat man?
at frat, n.
[UK] M. Terry Old Liberty (1962) 180: ‘What the hell,’ Bo mumbles.
at what the hell!, excl.
[UK] M. Terry Old Liberty (1962) 166: He is a Hoosier.
at hoosier, n.
[UK] M. Terry Old Liberty (1962) 222: Goodbye, Bo. I’ll be seeing you, old hoss.
at old horse, n.
[UK] M. Terry Old Liberty (1962) 43: A little wife with nice jabongoes to kiss me hello every night.
at jabongoes, n.
[UK] M. Terry Old Liberty (1962) 101: She’s been around [...] to the regular jazzes, Saturday nights, when it’s just us and maybe P.J.’s wife and Smoker’s woman.
at jazz, n.
[UK] M. Terry Old Liberty (1962) 11: The hinges were mostly undone on the johnny seats.
at johnny, n.1
[UK] M. Terry Old Liberty (1962) 117: I was going licketysplickety, feet together, like a water-skier.
at lickety-split, adv.
[UK] M. Terry Old Liberty (1962) 61: No strain, boy. Stay loose.
at stay loose, phr.
[UK] M. Terry Old Liberty (1962) 36: I bought myself a penguin suit.
at penguin suit, n.
[UK] M. Terry Old Liberty (1962) 172: Bo was rubbernecking between the two of them.
at rubberneck, v.
[UK] M. Terry Old Liberty (1962) 33: Spicer and Bielo talked back and forth [...] chewing the fat in Russky.
at Russki, n.
[UK] M. Terry Old Liberty (1962) 202: You want to see all these spooks and fags you brought here get hurt? [...] we’re going to clean you, man, and run her back to town like the dirty little Chink whore she is.
at spook, n.
[UK] M. Terry Old Liberty (1962) 204: She took the hand of one of the stags and made him dance with her.
at stag, n.4
[UK] M. Terry Old Liberty (1962) 71: The Red Lattice was a townie place, they didn’t like Liberty boys.
at townie, n.
[UK] M. Terry Old Liberty (1962) 202: ‘Hear all that?’ ‘Yo,’ I said.
at yo!, excl.
[UK] M. Terry Old Liberty 33: A little wife with nice jabongoes to kiss me hello every night.
at jabongoes, n.
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