London / Cockney slang 10:50 - Jun 19 with 1965 views | johncharles | “Beeuwah” meaning a female person. No idea how it’s spelled. Any of you Laandaners know the origins of this. I only lived and worked in London for 50 years so not really a Londoner. |  |
| Strong and stable my arse. |
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London / Cockney slang on 11:06 - Jun 19 with 1917 views | TheChef | "Only" 50 years?? |  |
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London / Cockney slang on 11:55 - Jun 19 with 1812 views | BrianMcCarthy | New to me. In Cork City slang a Beour is a good-looking young woman. Very close. FWIW, it's said to have derived from either Viking or Traveller languages. |  |
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London / Cockney slang on 12:13 - Jun 19 with 1767 views | colinallcars | Anyone know any backslang ? Cockneys, if they wanted to call the governor a f*ckin' old sod, would place the last letter first, reverse the word and say it phonetically. It would be kaycuffin deelodos. The guv would be none the wiser. |  | |  |
London / Cockney slang on 12:17 - Jun 19 with 1751 views | nick_hammersmith |
London / Cockney slang on 12:13 - Jun 19 by colinallcars | Anyone know any backslang ? Cockneys, if they wanted to call the governor a f*ckin' old sod, would place the last letter first, reverse the word and say it phonetically. It would be kaycuffin deelodos. The guv would be none the wiser. |
I always thought backslang was a prison thing, ended up going over to Aus as well |  | |  |
London / Cockney slang on 12:19 - Jun 19 with 1740 views | colinallcars | Yes Aussies used it too. |  | |  |
London / Cockney slang on 12:35 - Jun 19 with 1687 views | Juzzie | Born and brought up and lived in London all my life and never heard that slang for a women. |  | |  |
London / Cockney slang on 12:51 - Jun 19 with 1613 views | NewBee | According to Ikiw, some backslang terms have been adopted in standard English, eg Yob for Boy. |  | |  |
London / Cockney slang on 13:04 - Jun 19 with 1584 views | TheChef |
London / Cockney slang on 12:35 - Jun 19 by Juzzie | Born and brought up and lived in London all my life and never heard that slang for a women. |
Same for me. Did you mean Beulah?? The name Beulah, of Hebrew origin, primarily means "married" or "bride". |  |
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London / Cockney slang on 13:52 - Jun 19 with 1514 views | Mick_S | Gib taf reknaw was pretty common round my way. |  |
| Did I ever mention that I was in Minder? |
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London / Cockney slang on 13:57 - Jun 19 with 1491 views | kensalriser |
London / Cockney slang on 13:52 - Jun 19 by Mick_S | Gib taf reknaw was pretty common round my way. |
In Liverpool it's the luf tik reknaw. |  |
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London / Cockney slang on 14:04 - Jun 19 with 1465 views | nick_hammersmith |
London / Cockney slang on 13:57 - Jun 19 by kensalriser | In Liverpool it's the luf tik reknaw. |
You are all doing it wrong! It's not a straight mirror. You need to swap the first letter and then reverse it, otherwise its not really a code |  | |  |
London / Cockney slang on 14:05 - Jun 19 with 1461 views | dmm |
London / Cockney slang on 13:57 - Jun 19 by kensalriser | In Liverpool it's the luf tik reknaw. |
Usually when aimed at Nhoj Yrret |  | |  |
London / Cockney slang on 14:05 - Jun 19 with 1460 views | SimonJames | Never heard of Beeuwah. |  |
| 100% of people who drink water will die. |
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London / Cockney slang on 14:51 - Jun 19 with 1382 views | Boston |
London / Cockney slang on 14:05 - Jun 19 by SimonJames | Never heard of Beeuwah. |
Well, she's never heard of you. |  |
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London / Cockney slang on 14:59 - Jun 19 with 1357 views | brewers_hoop |
London / Cockney slang on 12:13 - Jun 19 by colinallcars | Anyone know any backslang ? Cockneys, if they wanted to call the governor a f*ckin' old sod, would place the last letter first, reverse the word and say it phonetically. It would be kaycuffin deelodos. The guv would be none the wiser. |
That’s a form of back slang - actual back slang is just words said backwards. My great Nan taught me it years ago - my great grandad used it on the markets in Hammersmith. Unless it’s particularly long words, I’m not far off fluent - but basically it’s useless cos no-one else understands! |  | |  |
London / Cockney slang on 15:07 - Jun 19 with 1325 views | NorthLondonR | Yatty, yat or chirpse no longer seem to exist as terms |  | |  |
London / Cockney slang on 15:43 - Jun 19 with 1240 views | HAYESBOY | I hardly hear 'birds or bird' anymore. |  |
| Smells like a trout farm in here |
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London / Cockney slang on 19:14 - Jun 19 with 962 views | ted_hendrix | Now there's a word that I don't understand I hear it every day from my old man It may be Cockney rhyming slang It ain't in no school book He says it every time that he gets mad A regular caution is my old dad Rub the old man up the wrong way, bet your life you'll hear him say Gertcha, cowson, gertcha Gertcha! Song by Chas & Dave |  |
| My Father had a profound influence on me, he was a lunatic. |
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London / Cockney slang on 19:30 - Jun 19 with 923 views | Ghost_on_the_Westway |
London / Cockney slang on 19:14 - Jun 19 by ted_hendrix | Now there's a word that I don't understand I hear it every day from my old man It may be Cockney rhyming slang It ain't in no school book He says it every time that he gets mad A regular caution is my old dad Rub the old man up the wrong way, bet your life you'll hear him say Gertcha, cowson, gertcha Gertcha! Song by Chas & Dave |
Who’da thought Chas & Dave would fall foul of censors, but some toff at the Beeb asked them not to sing “cowson” when on TOTP, so in a true rock n roll form of rebellion that Joe Strummer would have killed for, Chas (or was it Dave) stared at the camera with a daft grin and mouthed it. Cowson - great word. Brilliantly used by Monkfish “the no nonsense, uncompromising vet” in The Fast Show when a cow was giving birth - “ You! Spread ‘em! Right! Aaht, you caah-son”. [Post edited 19 Jun 19:31]
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London / Cockney slang on 20:19 - Jun 19 with 847 views | Mick_S |
London / Cockney slang on 19:14 - Jun 19 by ted_hendrix | Now there's a word that I don't understand I hear it every day from my old man It may be Cockney rhyming slang It ain't in no school book He says it every time that he gets mad A regular caution is my old dad Rub the old man up the wrong way, bet your life you'll hear him say Gertcha, cowson, gertcha Gertcha! Song by Chas & Dave |
When the kids are swinging on the gate 😉 |  |
| Did I ever mention that I was in Minder? |
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London / Cockney slang on 00:22 - Jun 20 with 656 views | CiderwithRsie |
London / Cockney slang on 19:30 - Jun 19 by Ghost_on_the_Westway | Who’da thought Chas & Dave would fall foul of censors, but some toff at the Beeb asked them not to sing “cowson” when on TOTP, so in a true rock n roll form of rebellion that Joe Strummer would have killed for, Chas (or was it Dave) stared at the camera with a daft grin and mouthed it. Cowson - great word. Brilliantly used by Monkfish “the no nonsense, uncompromising vet” in The Fast Show when a cow was giving birth - “ You! Spread ‘em! Right! Aaht, you caah-son”. [Post edited 19 Jun 19:31]
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Monkfish was brilliant ("You! Pull your knickers up and make me a cup of tea") Was always waiting for his next incarnation, reckon they could have run that for years. Recently heard an adaptation of a V I Warshawski detective story in which one of the suspects was called Monkfish and I kept waiting for him to go full Fast Show. |  | |  |
London / Cockney slang on 09:33 - Jun 20 with 451 views | _tf_ | Don't know either, but Graham Greene's Brighton Rock has Pinky and the gang describing women as 'buers', a word I had never read before or since. It's derogatory and means 'loose'. |  | |  |
London / Cockney slang on 11:59 - Jun 20 with 346 views | DiggertheMole | In Brighton Rock, Ida is consistently a "buer". This is down to the misogynistic attutude of Pinkie and his cronies. Rose, innocent and implicated is only a "buer" until she becomes Pinkie's property. In the original film, Ida's status as "loose" is confirmed by her singing and dancing as a showgirl thus assuredly a prostitute. |  | |  |
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