Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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Enderby Outside choose

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[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 341: All right [...] you win. Take your ackers.
at acker, n.1
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 266: I suppose you’ll be sleeping in your shirt or in the altogether.
at altogether, the, n.
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 365: Got it this morning on the talkbox, in the near-and-far.
at near and far, n.
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 365: Laid out, brad, in some arsee plum-and-apple in the Smoke.
at plum and apple, n.
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 303: The gobblers leave it strictly on the old antonio.
at on the antonio under antonio, n.
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 305: Little stoshny [? = stash] I got up this street of a thousand arseholes.
at arsehole, n.
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 302: And this is you on it [i.e. a passport] and the whole thing donk and not one little bit gritty. The genuine, and you ready to ash it up.
at ash, v.
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 327: The man at the blackboard had just finished writing Hot kitchens of his ass.
at ass, n.
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 298: If anybody else wants to go, I’ll have to tell them to let it bake until we get to Marrakesh.
at bake it (v.) under bake, v.1
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 297: She’s going on about you being a dangerous criminal, which sounds to me like a load of balls.
at balls, n.
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 362: Left the whole bimbang kadoozer to you then has he, brad?
at whole bang shoot, n.
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 300: Slops out. Here’s your skilly, you horrible murderer, you. Snout-barons.
at baron, n.
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 302: Your name I know but I won’t blart it.
at blart, v.
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 302: Had to blow, see the great wide open.
at blow, v.1
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 304: The Yank junks go bonko for it.
at bonkers, adj.
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 302: Fifty or so miles from the capital, boojie little rathole.
at bourgie, adj.
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 304: Call it what you like, brad.
at brad, n.3
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 361: You sure he’s footed the old garbage-can proper?.
at kick the bucket, v.
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 335: Now bugger off and buy yourself a shave.
at bugger off, v.
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 277: he wore a white bum-freezer with claret lapels.
at bum freezer (n.) under bum, n.1
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 322: All right, buster. Let’s hear from you.
at buster, n.3
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 345: My underpants filling with bloody cack and the agony of pissing.
at cack, n.2
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 295: A large blurred photograph of Yod Crewsy with stretched gob or cakehole.
at cakehole (n.) under cake, n.1
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 299: You got money, Charlie?
at charlie, n.2
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 307: You say Rawcliffe, brad? Rawcliffe the jarvey you bid to chop?
at chop, v.2
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 366: Forked me on the cobbles and no rare-with-Worcester [i.e. mistake].
at on the cobbles under cobbles, n.
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 301: You craked? You skirted? You got the big drop on?
at cracked, adj.
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 302: And this is you on it [i.e. a passport] and the whole thing donk and not one little bit gritty. The genuine.
at donk, adj.
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 365: His three brads keeping double-scotch, two at his toots and behind his uncle.
at double-scotch, n.
[UK] A. Burgess Enderby Outside in Complete Enderby (2002) 301: You craked? You skirted? You got the big drop on?
at have the big drop on (v.) under drop, n.4
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