Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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A Fatal Attachment choose

Quotation Text

[UK] R. Barnard A Fatal Attachment (1993) 180: ‘Thick?’ ‘Two planks.’.
at ...two short planks under thick as..., adj.
[UK] R. Barnard A Fatal Attachment (1993) 200: Life has been a bastard to him.
at bastard, n.
[UK] R. Barnard Fatal Attachment (1993) 171: ‘Golly,’ said Mary, impressed.
at golly!, excl.
[UK] R. Barnard A Fatal Attachment (1993) 185: All he thinks of doing is groping. I hate gropers.
at grope, v.
[UK] R. Barnard A Fatal Attachment (1993) 179: And like he was pooh-poohing the idea.
at pooh-pooh, v.
[UK] R. Barnard A Fatal Attachment (1993) 166: Right-ho. Go ahead.
at righto!, excl.
[UK] R. Barnard A Fatal Attachment (1993) 159: Let him in [...] Then you can scoot off for an hour or two.
at scoot, v.
[UK] R. Barnard A Fatal Attachment (1993) 188: He squared it with Midlands TV – said the baby had colic.
at square it (v.) under square, v.
[UK] R. Barnard A Fatal Attachment (1993) 175: They go up t’woods for a bit of the usual.
at usual, the, n.
[UK] R. Barnard A Fatal Attachment (1993) 182: Lydia thought our Dad was a big thickie.
at thickie, n.
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