Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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Hell on Hoe Street choose

Quotation Text

[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 129: Alia keeps coming across only I turn her down of course.
at come across, v.
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 262: He went down and they gave him a kicking for afters.
at afters, n.
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 46: Stopped by a white gate got the intercom. No need for using the Alexander though on account of a posse of geezers [...] smiling at us.
at Alexander, n.
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 199: Noreen was likely for mashing up my short and curlies.
at short and curlies, n.
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 172: ‘Some Pakistan geezer reckons I going to waste him,’ [...] ‘You? You and whose army?’.
at you and whose army?, phr.
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 204: Kind of an arsy city type, not your Essex boy.
at arsey, adj.2
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 134: I come out of nick happy as Larry.
at ...Larry under happy as..., adj.
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 96: All our doctors are Asians in Walthamstow. You be like a pig in shit.
at ...a pig in shit under happy as..., adj.
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 177: He wanted my assist lifting some geezer shafted a copper.
at assist, n.
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 174: Best I tell her the Auntie Ruth.
at Auntie Ruth, n.
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 105: Jesus. He was wanting a backhander. Grease my way.
at back-hander, n.
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 7: Yeah course it ain’t. On the pope’s bollocks.
at in one’s ballocks under ballocks, n.
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 121: Rameez was a kind of baron. Kind of a minor baron. He did local business, protection and retail, and a bit of car theft.
at baron, n.
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 48: Bit of a f . . . bit of a goer was Kamran. Charlie Big Potatoes innit?
at Charlie (Big) Potatoes, n.
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 115: He was never a real bingo in the looks department.
at bingo, n.4
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 215: All the bits of stuff in Walthamstow came round.
at bit of stuff, n.
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 8: I [...] watched the bits moving in that shirt.
at bits, n.1
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 214: Nicky you all right in the bonce?
at bonce, n.
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 215: She started back on the big boo-hoos.
at boo-hoo, n.
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 173: Serious grief is what we got! Be doing my brain in!
at do someone’s brain in (v.) under brain, n.1
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 208: And what about me and my bro here.
at bro, n.1
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 143: There is rival [...] There is bloody buggering Jamil Khan Jamal!
at buggering, adj.
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 154: ‘You never whistled?’ ‘Nah. You told me button it.’.
at button one’s lip, v.
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 5: ‘Speak English bad,’ he goes [...] ‘My Urdu ain’t none too bleedin’ clever neither.’.
at clever, adj.
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 215: You such a clever dick on the verbals.
at clever dick, n.
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 154: Ain’t your clit finger I hope?
at clit, n.
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 192: Junkie heaven it was up there, score any time you were clucking.
at cluck, v.4
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 217: I reckon you down shit creek without a paddle.
at up shit(’s) creek under shit creek, n.
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 234: Not got your lemon curd with you I hope?
at lemon (curd), n.
[UK] J. Cameron Hell on Hoe Street 170: Forensics all over the shop. They even dabbed for fingerprints.
at dab, v.1
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