Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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Jubb choose

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[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 166: You’re in the shit up to here and sooner you [...] stop fart-arsing about the better.
at fart-arse, v.
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 9: I was stuck in the b. High Street with an hour [...] to wait.
at b, adj.
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 21: It’s ar par ten, Cyril! [...] Time for beddy-byes!
at beddy-bye, n.
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 25: It’s full of ’em. Birds! [...] Shoulda seen this one with the big threepennies.
at threepenny bits, n.
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 62: You peeping bloody Tom!
at bloody, adj.
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 208: Debollock him! Yeh! Get his trousers down!
at de-bollock, v.
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 178: Hello, thought I, don’t tell me this is an invasion by the beatnik brigade.
at brigade, n.
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 188: Oh, the young bucks [...] Where do they get their finery?
at buck, n.1
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 170: Now bugger off! And stay buggered off.
at bugger off!, excl.
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 25: When I get up, over an hour later, I was buggered! I was, I was buggered.
at buggered, adj.2
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 105: ‘Bullet?’ asked Duggie as I [...] began to clear out my desk.
at bullet, n.1
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 35: You ever see ’ow they carry on down there? Shuting and carrying on they was.
at carry on, v.
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 208: Come on, doolallies! Get hold of him!
at doolally, adj.
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 179: Every man jack and woman pledged to the destruction of Stan.
at every man jack (n.) under every, adj.
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 49: Little Sally Frost. Christ I must get across that one again.
at get across (v.) under get, v.
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 30: I’ve been through her more times than you’ve had happy birthdays.
at go through, v.
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 20: Oh, God blimey mate, turn it up!
at gorblimey!, excl.
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 159+: Her dress is hoisted up and her headlights — well, let’s just say I can see plenty.
at headlight, n.
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 161: Show this Herbert out. He doesn’t want to buy.
at Herbert, n.
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 138: Bloody sodding hellfire Jesus Christ All-hopping Mighty!
at hopping, adj.
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 25: Get’s this black-haired bit of humpty in the bedroom.
at bit of humpty (n.) under humpty, n.
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 20: Oh, God blimey mate, turn it up!
at turn it up!, excl.
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 196: ‘I see that you are offering Muffs for Sale!’ ‘Yes [...] the young lady is twenty one years old, very attractive brunette and she does all services’.
at muff, n.1
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 27: How’s that nympho of yours getting on, eh?
at nympho, n.
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 107: You can follow me all afternoon [...] Otherwise [...] piss off.
at piss off!, excl.
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 25: Right [...] flop into me pit, spark out, that’s it for the night.
at spark out, v.
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 82: Pack it in, mate!
at pack it in under pack, v.1
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 153: I spoke [...] making it appear that I was not a corase pick-up man.
at pick-up, adj.
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 25: Right [...] flop into me pit, spark out, that’s it for the night.
at pit, n.
[UK] K. Waterhouse Jubb (1966) 169: Has anyone been over his drum? [...] Hes got half the porny books in London there.
at porny, adj.
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