Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 114: Now, this dude didn’t have a bear’s chance of shitting in a swinging jug of getting out of there.
at bear’s chance of shitting in a swinging jug, n.
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 154: Killian came after us [...] figuring he had us cold. But we had an ace in the hole.
at ace in the hole (n.) under ace, n.
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 45: If you come across for me, I’ll tell ’em you’re all right so they won’t fuck with ya.
at come across, v.
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 123: I wasn’t going to take an ass-whipping.
at ass-whipping, n.
[UK] J. Carr Bad 54: We’re kicked back in the next room.
at kick back, v.2
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 47: They started calling us ‘the Booty Bandits’; all the other cons knew about us and were afraid.
at booty bandit, n.
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 123: The next day Sheik paid me and beat dogshit out of Mule.
at beat the shit out of, v.
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 118: He took red devils and thought he was big shit.
at bigshit, adj.
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 58: The sandwich man [...] had bonneroo rolls and cookies.
at bonaroo, adj.
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 96: I started keeping book.
at book, n.
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 64: This dude gets out looking sharper than a broke-dick dog.
at broke-dick (adj.) under broke, adj.1
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 181: [He]’d been busted for running bunko games on old ladies.
at bunco game (n.) under bunco, n.
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 46: I wasn’t allowed to cell with anyone.
at cell, v.
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 53: The dude was a real cluck.
at cluck, n.1
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 44: What kinda work you in, boy? Cocksuckin’ or cornholin’?
at cocksuck, v.
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 64: ‘Look here, cool,’ he says to me.
at cool, n.2
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 43: The DA nearly crapped in his pants.
at crap one’s pants (v.) under crap, v.2
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 44: I’d known a lot of hot-dog guys before [...] but never had I seen the likes of Maynard Farrell. Maynard was the doggie daddy, master of the homos.
at daddy, n.
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 141: ‘Disneyland’ is what all the cons call CMC-East. For homos it’s dreams come true.
at Disneyland, n.
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 85: They didn’t even bother talking to Doc, because they knew he was such a cold dog.
at dog, n.2
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 44: I’d known a lot of hot-dog guys before.
at hot dog, n.1
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 115: The homo convinced him to bring in Playboy and every other hot-dog magazine imaginable.
at hot dog, adj.2
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 44: I’d known and lot of hot-dog guys before [...] but never had I seen the likes of Maynard Farrell. Maynard was the doggie daddy, master of the homos.
at hot dog, adj.2
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 44: Maynard was the doggie daddy, master of the homos.
at doggy, adj.2
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 147: You’re pretty drove up, aren’t you, boy?
at drove up, adj.
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 28: He came up all white and coughing, his eyes like two pissholes in a snowbank.
at eyes like pissholes in the snow (n.) under eye, n.
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 136: Flip-flops, also called ‘knickknacks,’ are dudes that begin by making the homos but wind up playing the female roles themselves.
at flip-flop, n.1
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 20: Some flattop frat dude with a dumb look.
at frat, n.
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 44: All nine dudes on our crew were young blacks, and we were all fuck-offs.
at fuck-off, n.
[UK] J. Carr Bad (1995) 68: They picked up the bats [...] went after a knot of guards, and fucked them up bad.
at fuck up, v.
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