Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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The Wilby Conspiracy choose

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[UK] P. Driscoll Wilby Conspiracy (1991) 11: Jake [...] was doing the first year of a bluejacket for sticking some whore with a knife.
at bluecoat, n.
[UK] P. Driscoll Wilby Conspiracy (1991) 42: The fat Boer is hurt pretty bad.
at boer, n.
[UK] P. Driscoll Wilby Conspiracy (1991) 63: ‘Car lighter conked out,’ he said.
at conk (out), v.
[UK] P. Driscoll Wilby Conspiracy (1991) 152: You should be locked up for dondering policemen.
at donder, v.
[UK] P. Driscoll Wilby Conspiracy (1991) 31: The old shebeen queen made a soft clicking noise in her throat.
at shebeen queen (n.) under shebeen, n.
[UK] P. Driscoll Wilby Conspiracy (1991) 48: A stuffed-shirt Afrikaner, full of correctness and self-importance.
at stuffed shirt, adj.
[UK] P. Driscoll Wilby Conspiracy (1991) 52: He’s a bright boy, a slim kaffir.
at slim, adj.
[UK] P. Driscoll Wilby Conspiracy (1991) 154: You better believe it, soutie.
at soutie, n.
[UK] P. Driscoll Wilby Conspiracy (1991) 151: What does she want with Bushmen and bolsheviks and a kaffir-loving soutpiel like you? [...] That’s what we call an Englishman. Saltprick.
at soutpiel, n.
[UK] P. Driscoll Wilby Conspiracy (1991) 43: ‘The ears. The jacks. The tokoloshes. The police,’ Shack explained.
at tokoloshes, n.
[UK] P. Driscoll Wilby Conspiracy (1991) 9: The Kliptronk, the maximum-security block.
at tronk, n.
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