Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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Hiparama of the Classics choose

Quotation Text

[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 22: He’s havin’ a ball of all balls, happy as a ring a ding bird in a ding dong tree.
at ring-a-ding, adj.
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 15: Hip to the cool sweet groove of Liberty and solid sent upon the Ace Lick that all Cats and Kitties, Red, White, or Blue! are created Level, in front.
at ace, adj.
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 20: Them Christian Cats sayin’ that yo ain’t no where and you ain’t gonna be no where and if you was to be somewhere you’d be no where anyway.
at ain’t nowhere, phr.
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 10: Don’t bug me lad, Get off my back.
at get off someone’s back (v.) under back, n.1
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 14: The Cat is still up there beatin’ on his chops.
at beat one’s gums, v.
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 10: Man! Look at that Cat Blow!
at blow, v.1
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 16: They gave this Cat five cents worth of ink [...] and he sat down and wrote up such a breeze.
at breeze, n.1
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 17: He was my buddy-cat, and he leveled with me.
at buddy, n.
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 10: Get out of the way, don’t bug me lad, Get off my back.
at bug, v.2
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 8: They wailed so far out, and so Crazy and so Coo-Coo. [Ibid.] 25: Look at Princess Libadee [...] She look pretty coo-coo today.
at coo-coo, adj.1
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 8: So, they cooled The All Hip Mahatma, they cooled the chicks [...] and they stashed the spinnin’ wheels.
at cool, v.2
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 21: Nero is havin’ a ball, he’s diggin’ this mad game, he’s juicin’ up a storm, chompin’ on his crazy pills.
at crazy pill (n.) under crazy, adj.
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 23: While he was gone, OO-Bop-A-Lap done burned his pad down and sold his family into slavery — Just one of those little Ole Sunday afternoon Criss-Crosses.
at criss cross, v.
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 8: The crowd whistlin’ Indian Jazz Music as they cut along the pikes of India. [Ibid.] 18: And the next thing you know, WHAM!! They is in Rome, cuttin’ up the pike.
at cut, v.2
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 14: Like some studs dig Kennedy, like some Studs dig Nixon.
at dig, v.3
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 7: Here’s the way the scene went down.
at go down, v.
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 10: When he laid it down wham! It stayed there!
at lay down, v.
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 17: Some claim that Brutus’s story was a drag, / But I dug the story was solid!
at drag, n.1
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 12: Drag not, and Thou Shalt not be Drug!
at drug, adj.
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 25: He [...] would stick his wig out of the castle window in the early bright and say [etc.].
at early bright (n.) under early, adj.
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 16: Mark has got to put Cleo down, this was a tight move for him ’cause this Cleo was an early day Elizabeth Taylor.
at early day (adj.) under early, adj.
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 15: It is for us the swingin’ to pick up the dues of these departed Studs and fly it through to Endsville!
at Endsville, n.
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 9: Now Jack, you may have heard many a far out Jam Session. [Ibid.] 19: Don’t Bug me with the Christian Cats, [...] they ain’t as far out as I is.
at far out, adj.2
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 27: This flipped The Gasser! It also shook up the Indians.
at flip out, v.
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 10: So the Naz and his Buddies [...] run into a little Cat with a bent frame.
at frame, n.1
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 11: My frame is bent, Naz. It’s been bent from in front!!!
at from in front, phr.
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 20: Them Christian Cats sayin’ that yo ain’t no where and [...] if you was to be somewhere you’d be no where anyway ’cause you ain’t no where, IN FRONT!
at up front, adv.
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 16: WHAMMMMMI!! Everybody got off! Period!
at get off, v.2
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 15: And we all dig this is the most righteous gig, that we can’t miss with all these bulgin’ eyes.
at gig, n.1
[US] ‘Lord Buckley’ Hiparama of the Classics 26: [He] blew the whole gig on a beach in Florida in 1510 .
at blow the gig (v.) under gig, n.1
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