Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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Goodoo Goodoo choose

Quotation Text

[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 15: It looks cold enough to freeze the balls off an Eskimo’s pool table.
at cold enough to freeze the balls off a brass monkey, phr.
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 231: I wonder how she is today? Not that I give a rat’s arse.
at not give a rat’s ass, v.
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 5: It had catchy jingles, bugger all ads [etc.].
at bugger all, n.
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 188: A couple of days in Cairns lying around in the sun before I head back to the old steak and kidney.
at steak and kidney, n.
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 258: The sailor who took the head count was the dumbest, most miserable arse God ever put breath into.
at arse, n.
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 96: Everyone, except Mick, went arse over head into the river.
at arse over head under arse, n.
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 199: There was mud from arsehole to breakfast time.
at from arsehole to breakfast (time) under arsehole, n.
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 253: Christ, he thought, has this sheila got attitude or what?
at attitude, n.
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 26: Les didn’t think it would be doing the right thing accepting money from a grieving mother and was about to knock it back.
at knock back, v.
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 188: I’ll have a quiet one tonight [...] then bail out in the morning.
at bail out, v.
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 57: There was a bit more beat-up about the incident.
at beat-up, n.
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 3: There was a huge blow-up betwen the Federal police, the NSW Police and everybody else involved.
at blow-up, n.1
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 79: A cute backside [...] going up and down on his rainbow-coloured old boy.
at old boy, n.
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 255: Follow me, shit for brains.
at shit-for-brains, n.
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 58: It was nice to think there was a chance Beryl’s daughter wasn’t quite sliced bread.
at sliced bread, adj.
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 45: Scandinavian backpackers wearing shorts, bumbags [...] and leather sandals.
at bum bag (n.) under bum, n.1
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 172: Bird-eating spiders [...] They ’re good for brandy sales but.
at but, adv.
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 204: He suddenly found himself caught short. The last two beers [...] must have gone straight through him.
at caught short, adj.
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 24: Twenty-five grand. That’s a lot of chops.
at chop, n.1
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 187: There was something else that would make him feel even better again. A nice cool one. He [...] walked down to the bar.
at cool one (n.) under cool, adj.
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 188: Cooktown’s a nice place, just bad luck I cracked it for some dud weather.
at crack it, v.1
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 51: You could do all right at the races tonight. You might just crack it at the punt.
at crack it, v.1
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 40: I’d have riped that microphone out of the dash and shoved it fair up his date.
at date, n.3
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 132: ‘Let’s do breakfast.’ ‘Can you give me fifteen minutes?’.
at do, v.1
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 127: ‘How about I [...] put my sweet little backside up in the air?’ ‘A doggy, Woody?’ ‘Mmmhh. Think of it more as a pussy catty’.
at doggy, n.
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 98: ‘How about I meet you at nine o’clock?’ ‘Okey doke’.
at okey-doke!, excl.
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 247: A small clearing in the scrub, barely big enough for a Vee-dub to turn round in let alone a larger vehicle.
at vee-dub, n.1
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 259: You’ve been conned, dummy.
at dummy, n.1
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 40: I’d have riped that microphone out of the dash and shoved it fair up his date.
at fair, adv.
[Aus] R.G. Barrett Goodoo Goodoo 6: Whatever I call myself, I’d better get my finger out.
at get one’s finger out (v.) under finger, n.
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