Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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Foxes choose

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[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 94: ‘We’re not gonna have a party?’ [...] ‘We sure as shootin’ are,’ Mrs Axeman said.
at sure as shooting under sure as..., phr.
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 174: If I tell her I love her, she keeps saying I must be high ... isn’t that the rat’s ass.
at cat’s ass, n.1
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 134: Loser, looking scuzzy as a beach rat, walked into the living room.
at beach bum (n.) under beach, n.
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 174: ‘God, you’re really bent up.’ The boy shrugged.
at bent up, adj.
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 40: Sweet things. Like coke, and ’ludes, and reds, and Christmas trees and speckled birds.
at speckled birds, n.
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 155: That was a really stupid bitch thing to do.
at bitchy, adj.
[UK] D Gram Foxes (1980) 27: ‘Hey Jeannie, like your new hair-do,’ said the shiny-faced man with a bogus smile.
at bogus, adj.
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 92: Madge was getting thoroughly bummed out. ‘Mom, I’m trying to get my head into having a good time and if you’re going to go and spoil it—’.
at bummed (out), adj.
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 86: They showed no inclination to slow down. He came within a breath of getting steamrollered by two of the lumbering chuggers.
at chuggerhead, n.
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 16: The creep in the car, creepaloid.
at creepazoid (n.) under creep, n.
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 43: Hey, dickhead?
at dickhead, n.
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 82: ‘You guys all think you’re so hip, slick and cool,’ Scott said with a sneer. ‘Well, you’re all dirt heads, you know that?’.
at dirtbag, n.
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 117: God, do I hate a down head.
at down-head (n.) under down, n.5
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 146: Her dad doesn’t want any of us coming out there, he’s such a total Dracula.
at Dracula, n.
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 62: You haven’t? Oh, drats!
at drat!, excl.
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 33: Hey, bus! Dumb bus, dumb fucker bus!
at dumb-fuck, adj.
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 42: ‘Loser got it for me.’ ‘Five-finger discount, oh yeah!’.
at five-finger discount (n.) under five-finger(ed), adj.
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 17: ‘Fuckeroon,’ she grumbled.
at -eroonie, sfx
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 12: She’s gonna flunk out, you know.
at flunk, v.
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 38: ‘Asshole Fuckdog Honky Cunt!’ shrieked the dude at her back. ‘Twat!’.
at fuckdog (n.) under fuck, n.
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 119: ‘God, what a gimp,’ grumbled Annie.
at gimp, n.2
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 77: Creature’s having a gross-out and he wanted you there.
at gross-out, n.
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 11: Well, do something, you guys.
at guy, n.2
[UK] D.y Gram Foxes (1980) 86: Ten or eleven hogs – Harleys and big Hondas – flashed along.
at hog, n.
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 33: ‘Where’s she going?’ ‘Holly-weird.’.
at Hollyweird, n.
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 38: ‘Asshole Fuckdog Honky Cunt!’ shrieked the dude at her back. ‘Twat!’.
at honkie, adj.
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 52: That guy, the cop, ain’t my dad. No hype, he just isn’t.
at hype, n.1
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 40: Sweet things, like [...] Black Mollys and even some Wild Turkey.
at black mollies (n.) under molly, n.2
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 79: I may have slept with a few guys [...] But I’m not some total nympho.
at nympho, n.
[UK] D. Gram Foxes (1980) 64: She oozed out of the truck.
at ooze, v.
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