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Slangs & AI derived meanings
I heard a woman on PBS's face The Nation discussing slang and "The Full Monty" was discussed. As an ex-Brit I understood it to refer to the full English breakfast that General Montgomery insisted upon daily, hence The Full... However she said that it came from a suit called a Montague which has three pieces and all the bells and whistles. Never heard of such a thing. What I do know is that Montague Burton is the largest chain of tailors in the UK. At the end of WW II and beyond, people leaving the armed services were given a week's pay and a voucher to take to Burtons for a new suit. Gradually the term "Going For a Burton" became synonymous with leaving, departing, and then evolved into dying as a result of an air crash or any other type of accent. It became very common with the National Servicemen (Draftees) of the 50's and 60's. It seems to have stayed with those generations. (ed: added verbatim - well done!)
1- A fake gangsta, a wanna be gangsta. (exam. "most rappers that say they are gangstas are some fake ass wankstas!, If they committed half the crimes they claim they do on there records, they would be in jail by now".) 2- A rapper who tries to live the life that they rap about , even though before they were rappers they never were gangstas, did any crimes, or went to jail.
Scabby eye is London Cockney rhyming slang for pie.
Blunts mixed with marijuana and PCP; methamphetamine; marijuana cigarettes soaked in PCP (
Do the fish is slang for to suffer blackouts, seizures, convulsions or other side effects following inhaling nitrous oxide.
Office of Strategic Services. Created in 1942, the OSS was an intelligence-gathering operation which became a forerunner of the CIA. Pg. 517
Lairy is British slang for loud, boistrous. Lairy is Australian slang for gaudy or flashy.
Dinner or evening meal. e.g. "Why don't you come and have tea with us tonight?" See also Bring a plate
A common phrase used by beer drinkers to indicate that it is the other person's turn to buy a round of drinks
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