Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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Brixton Rock choose

Quotation Text

[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 222: What-a-gwarn? How comes you reach home so early?
at what a gwarn?, phr.
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 83: There was this big bang and nuff smoke was coming from the amp.
at amp, n.
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 22: Carol and I were enjoying ourselves at the club, dancing and t’ing.
at and thing, phr.
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 104: Who the blouse an’ skirt is going to knock on my door at eleven o’clock on a Sunday morning?
at blouse and skirt!, excl.
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 84: Arsoning a match, and about to light his joint.
at arson, v.
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 136: A tournament in which the top kick-arse sounds in London would musically cross swords.
at kick-ass, adj.
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 211: An ‘I’m better than you’ vibe, similar to them teacher-arse-kissing prefects at school.
at ass-kissing, adj.
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 3: Feeling he must keep up his ‘bad bwai’ pose [etc.].
at bad boy, n.
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 211: He’s a friggin bounty. I dunno what Jean sees in him.
at bounty (bar), n.
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 75: Wondering how she managed to squeeze her solid, vibrating batty inside the denims.
at batty, n.2
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 44: Those pyjamas [...] look like something a battyman would wear.
at battyman (n.) under batty, n.2
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 99: Look how many times we’ve run out of batty paper in our yard.
at batty paper (n.) under batty, n.2
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 2: I don’t want no beast food.
at beast, adj.
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 2: Why should he make life easy for a beastman?
at beastman (n.) under beast, n.
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 1: There was no way he would let the beast know of the tribulation.
at beast, n.
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 77: You and that leggobeast were so tight, you has a print of her knickers on your Farah’s.
at leggo beast, n.
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 32: I used to have some fit piece of beef visit.
at beef, n.1
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 144: That’s a serious herb [...] You will be charged after one big-’ead.
at big head, n.1
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 84: He was trying to sell me some big-up suitcase yesterday. He’s so fool.
at big up, adj.
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 147: My mudder put a lock on the phone ’cos the last bill we got, went bionic.
at bionic, adj.
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 195: Hey, Brenton – beast [...] They’re probably bored and wanna jail up a blackhead for the night.
at black head (n.) under black, adj.
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 174: I’ll set you up [...] You won’t get no blank.
at blank, n.
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 102: Kiss me granny duty toenail [...] you actually t’ief the blaster.
at blaster, n.2
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 76: My friend told me you danced with the blue-foot for all friggin night.
at blue foot, n.
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 133: I had to tell them some bogus that you were sick.
at bogus, n.
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 19: Excited talk about how he had sent Terry Flynn to the bone-juggler’s.
at bone-juggler (n.) under bone, n.1
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 28: You like Sharion a lot, innit? Or do you just want to bone her?
at bone, v.2
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 101: An alarm bell that chased them through the brass-monkey air.
at brass monkey, adj.
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 21: Give me a brew [i.e. Special Brew], Floyd.
at brew, n.
[UK] (con. 1979–80) A. Wheatle Brixton Rock (2004) 21: A battered suitcase thumped out Dennis Brown’s Money in My Pocket. [Ibid.] 75: I’ve got this wicked Brixton suitcase, brand spanking.
at Brixton suitcase, n.
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