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Dictionary of Contemporary Slang

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geezer

182

geezer2 adj American

excellent, in hip hop and rap parlance

geezerbird n British

a girl with a masculine appearance and/ or supposedly male attitudes or behaviour. The term has been common among all age groups since the later 1990s.

‘Some people call me a geezerbird and I suppose I like it, I’m proud of it.’

(Recorded, female DJ, London, 1999)

geezing n American

injecting heroin, shooting up. An item of addicts’ and underworld slang, also used by the police, which appeared in the 1960s.

gelt n

money. The word is taken directly from Yiddish or German and has been used in all English-speaking areas since at least the 17th century, at first probably in allusion to Jewish moneylenders.

gendarmes n pl British

the police. A middle-class appropriation of the French word in an attempt at raciness.

Had a spot of bother with the gendarmes as I was driving down.

Generation X n American

a journalese coinage describing the supposedly listless, apathetic post-yuppie generation of young people who were entering adulthood in the early 1990s. The phrase was borrowed, in 1992, by the Canadian author Douglas Coupland, from earlier use as the title of a 1960s sociological analysis of youth rebellion and in the 1970s as the name of a wouldbe punk band.

gentleman of the road n British

a tramp, vagrant. A euphemism first applied to highwaymen and later by tramps to themselves.

Geoff (Hurst) n British

a first (class degree). The rhyming slang uses the name of the England football star of the later 1960s.

geordie n British

a native or inhabitant of Newcastle or Tyneside in the northeast of England. The word is a Scottish dialect version of George and probably first arose as a nickname for one of the Hanoverian kings, used by, and later applied to, soldiers billeted upon Newcastle. The

name refers also to the distinctive speech patterns of the area.

george1 adj American

excellent, first-rate, fine. A word from teenage slang of the late 1950s which is periodically revived by modern schoolchildren and college students. It probably derives from gorgeous or is an expansion of the letter ‘g’ (for good).

george2 vb American

to have sex, the term is used particularly by adolescents and refers to heterosexual activity by either sex

George Melly n British

belly, paunch. This item of rhyming slang employs the name of the corpulent old-Etonian jazz singer and writer.

George Raft n British

a draught (of air). A fairly widespread piece of jocular rhyming slang inspired by the American actor of the same name (famous for his tough-guy and underworld roles on and off screen).

Blimey, there’s a bit of a George Raft in here, ain’t there?

germ n British

an irritating, unpleasant or contemptible person. A schoolchildren’s term of criticism or abuse, typically applied to fellow pupils or younger children.

gerry, geri n British

an old person. A short form of ‘geriatric’, typically said without affection by teenagers or schoolchildren.

gertcha! exclamation British

a cockney cry, roughly equivalent to ‘get away!’, ‘give over!’, or ‘get out of it!’ and expressing disbelief or gentle mockery. The dated expression was revived for use in the musical accompaniment (by Chas and Dave) to a television advertisement for Courage Best Bitter screened in 1983.

‘“Gercher”, wheezes Dad convulsively over the debris of the saloon bar.’

(Town magazine, May 1964)

get n British

a bastard, literally or figuratively; an unpleasant or stupid person. This word is more widespread in the Midlands and north of England, generally in workingclass usage. In the south of England git is more common. Get was originally a derivation of ‘beget’ and meant a (begotten) child.

183

get in eye/face

get a click vb British

to succeed in picking up a partner. The term is heard particularly in the Scottish Lowlands and the north of England.

I hear Jillie managed to get a click last night.

get a job vb, exclamation American

(to) fulfil oneself. A joke variation on admonitions such as get a life or get real, which enjoyed a vogue in the 1990s.

get a life vb, exclamation

(to) fulfil oneself. An admonition, originally American, that became a vogue term from the early 1990s. Get a job is a jocular alternative.

get a rift/rush/hustle on vb British

to hurry up, make haste. These are more colourful working-class London variants of the colloquial ‘get a move on’.

get a room vb American

to behave more discreetly, remove oneself from sight. The phrase is applied, usually but not always lightheartedly, when a couple are publicly and/or embarrassingly engaged in love-play.

Come on you two, get a room!

Sheena and Damian are always at it in the corner of the bar. They should get a room.

get a twitch on vb British

to become agitated and/or furious. An item of London working-class slang heard among, e.g., football supporters from the 1990s.

get beats vb

to be beaten up (by someone). A term used by young street-gang members in London since around 2000.

get behind vb

to approve of, support, empathise with. A phrasal verb (originating in the USA) of the sort popular with the ‘alternative lifestyle’ proponents of the early 1970s.

I can’t really get behind the idea of God as some bearded dude sitting on a cloud.

Compare get off (on); get down

get boots vb American

to have sex. A vogue term in black street slang in the 1990s. Knock boots is an alternative, and probably original, version of the phrase.

get busy vb

1.to have sex

2.to eat, gorge oneself

get Chinese vb American

to get very stoned, become euphoric and/ or semi-conscious by smoking mari-

huana. This preppie expression is based on the premise that their stupefaction will rival that of Chinese opium addicts or that their glazed serenity will result in an Oriental demeanour.

get cogging vb British See cog2

get corrugated ankles vb British

to get drunk. An item of student slang in use in London and elsewhere since around 2000.

get down vb American

to let oneself go, begin something in earnest. This phrase was originally a piece of black slang, inspired by ‘get down to business’ (probably first used as a euphemism for beginning sexual activity, then transferred to musical activity). The expression is still heard in a musical context, referring for instance to musicians improvising successfully or to disco dancers ‘letting go’.

get dribbly vb British

to become intoxicated by drink or drugs. The phrase usually, but not necessarily, implies being visibly uncontrolled. It was in use among middle-class students in 2001.

get/have a cob on vb British

to become angry, display irritation. The term has been used in the Channel 4 TV soap opera Brookside. Eric Partridge dated the phrase to the 1930s: the ‘cob’ in question is probably originally a dialect term for a lump or a protrusion, and can be dated back to English slang of the later 18th century.

get (someone) in vb

to engage in lesbian sex

‘They’re all getting each other in, didn’t you know that?’

(Recorded, London student, September 1995)

get in! exclamation British

the phrase was defined by a user in 2001 as: ‘fantastic! Result! That was tremendous! Said after something quite brilliant has happened or if you hear good news’. Hop on! is a synonymous expression.

‘“I’ve managed to get front-row tickets for Steps”. “Get in!”’

(Recorded, London teenager, 2001)

get in (someone’s) eye/face vb American

to behave intrusively and annoyingly (towards)

get into bed

184

get into bed (with) vb

to merge or agree to liaise closely with. A piece of jargon from the business world which has become widely known since the late 1970s.

get it on vb

a. to succeed in having sex, to achieve (mutual) sexual gratification. An American euphemism dating from the 1960s.

‘I’m gonna ask you something right up front. Are you getting it on with that dude with the dog parlor or not?’

(The Serial, Cyra McFadden, 1976)

b. to succeed in something pleasurable or desirable. A generalisation of the first sense which was used, sometimes as an exhortation, in the hippy era. Both senses became known, and to some extent used, in Britain after 1970, but had largely fallen out of use by the end of the decade.

get it together vb

to organise oneself, one’s life and/or environment. A vogue term and cliché from around 1969. The ‘it’ refers to one’s ‘act’, one’s life, one’s head, or to things in general.

get it up vb

to achieve an erection. A common vulgarism.

get laid vb

to have sex. A derivation from lay, which spread from the USA to Britain around 1968.

‘Young guys in their twenties, of course they’re going to try and get laid, and even if they don’t succeed it’s hardly big news.’

(Lenny Henry, Time Out magazine, 26 July 1989)

get licks vb British

to be beaten up (by someone). A term used by young street-gang members in London since around 2000.

get messy vb British

to become intoxicated by drink or drugs. An item of student slang in use in London and elsewhere since around 2000.

get next to (someone) vb

to strike up a relationship (with someone). The phrase has been used by frequenters of discos since the late 1980s.

get off (on) vb

a. to achieve satisfaction, exhilaration or inspiration (from). This American expression of the early 1970s is an extension of an earlier purely sexual sense of the

phrase in which get off means to achieve orgasm. This concept was modified by the drug users’ image of leaving terra firma, of flying or floating in a state of euphoria. Since the late 1970s the term has been generalised (in Britain and Australia) to include finding pleasure from more innocuous sources, such as music.

Did you manage to get off on those mushrooms?

I really get off on that guitar solo.

b. to get someone off retains the sexual sense of bringing someone to a climax: this use of the phrase is fairly rare

get off one’s case vb British

to become intoxicated by drugs, to get high. An item of prison slang.

get one’s act/head/shit together vb

to organise oneself, arrange one’s affairs, start to perform efficiently or effectively. A euphemism from the era of alternative therapy which likens one’s behaviour to a performance (it may in fact have originated in theatrical or musical circles); unlike many such phrases it is still in widespread use.

get one’s arse in(to) gear vb

to prepare oneself, get organised and get going. A phrase which appeared in Britain and America (with ass) seemingly simultaneously around 1974. It is usually employed as an exhortation to someone who is disorganised or wasting time.

get one’s beans vb British

to have sex. An item of student slang in use in London and elsewhere since around 2000.

get one’s end away vb British

to have sex, succeed in seduction. A masculine vulgarism in widespread use since the 1960s, this is a variation on ‘get one’s end in’, a euphemism dating from the early years of the 20th century.

get one’s head together vb

to collect one’s thoughts, achieve a state of equanimity. A cliché of the ‘alternative society’ of the early 1970s (members of rock groups, suffering from the excesses of social and professional life, typically spoke of going to the countryside to get their heads together). This phrase is still heard, albeit more rarely, usually in the sense of pull oneself together or get one’s act together.

You know you really should try and get your head together if you intend to carry on in this business.

185

get the ass

get one’s jollies vb

to derive enjoyment, obtain sensual satisfaction. The gratification referred to in this phrase is often less innocuous than the lighthearted nature of the words might imply.

It’s not my idea of a good time, but if that’s how you get your jollies, I won’t stand in your way.

get one’s knickers in a twist vb British to become agitated, flustered or overexcited. This picturesque vulgarism originated in the late 1950s with a purely sexual sense. Now widely used, it is generally heard in the negative form, exhorting someone to calm down.

See also get one’s panties in a bunch

get one’s knob polished vb American to receive fellatio

get one’s leg over/across vb British

(of a male) to have sex, to succeed in seduction

‘You [Colin Moynihan, then minister for sport] can be honest with us. Did you get your leg over or not?’

(Private Eye magazine, April 1989)

get one’s oats vb British

to achieve sexual satisfaction. The phrase originates in the idea of ‘sowing one’s wild oats’, especially in the sense of sexual adventuring outside marriage. Since the 1960s the phrase has been applied to both men and women, and to sex in general rather than adultery in particular. It is heard in all social classes in Britain and Australia.

‘If he plays his cards right, he should end up getting his oats tonight.’

(Recorded, teenage drinker, London, 1986)

get one’s panties in a bunch vb

the Australian equivalent of get one’s knickers in a twist

get one’s rocks off vb

to obtain sexual satisfaction, achieve orgasm, ejaculate. An American vulgarism which became part of the hippy linguistic repertoire; some British users of the expression are unaware that rocks is a direct euphemism for testicles. (In American usage nuts or other terms could be substituted for rocks.) In the later 1970s the phrase was extended to mean to indulge oneself or enjoy oneself generally rather than in a specifically sexual sense. It now sounds dated.

‘But I only get my rocks off while I’m dreaming.’

(Lyric from ‘Rocks Off’, The Rolling Stones, 1972)

get on one’s wick/tits vb British

to irritate, annoy or vex. The ‘wick’ in question, unknown to many speakers, is a now rather archaic shortening of Hampton Wick, rhyming slang for prick (which is nowadays more usually shortened to hampton). In spite of the implied gender difference, both versions of the expression are used indiscriminately by both men and women.

‘It really gets on my tits when someone calls me a career woman.’

(Recorded, female journalist, London, 1986)

get on someone’s case vb American

to harass, badger or interfere. A phrase used with indignation or resentment, typically by an ‘underdog’ to or of an authority figure. The notion on which the expression is based is that of a judge or law-enforcer examining one’s case. ‘Get off my case’ is a widespread negative form.

get on the bag vb American

to act in a more mature or ‘manly’ way. A phrase used exclusively by males, particularly on campus. The bag reference is unclear.

get over vb American

to become a success in white society. An item of black street slang.

get real vb, exclamation

to face up to reality, to behave rationally. A vogue term originating in the USA and widespread elsewhere since the 1980s. Near synonyms are get a life and get a job.

get some poot vb British

to have sex. An item of student slang in use in London and elsewhere since around 2000.

get tapped up vb British

to succeed in meeting/seducing a partner. The phrase is used in working-class speech, particularly in the northeast of England.

‘Couldn’t even get tapped up last night.’

(Away The Lads, BBC 2 TV documentary, February 1993)

get the ass vb American

to become angry, irritated or furious. An item of black street-talk included in socalled Ebonics, recognised as a legitimate

get the horn

186

language variety by school officials in Oakland, California, in late 1996.

get the horn vb

to achieve an erection. A vulgarism employing the horn as a penis metaphor, heard more commonly in the adjective horny. ‘Get the horn’ is now mainly heard in uneducated adult speech and the language of schoolchildren. To be ‘on the (h)orn’ is an alternative form.

get the hump vb British

to become bad-tempered, morose or offended. This common expression is at least 100 years old. The origin of this sense of hump is not clear, although it may refer straightforwardly to a hunchback’s deformity, to a back bent with care, a head dropped in gloom, or a traveller’s burden. In modern cockney usage the phrase is often abbreviated to the adjective humpty.

get the needle, get the dead needle vb British

to become irritated, bitter or vindictive. This expression is one of a number referring to needle in the sense of provoke or annoy. This particular form of words has survived as a working-class Londoners’ phrase since the late 19th century.

get the salmon on prawn vb British

to have an erection. A piece of rhyming slang based on the phrase on the horn. The phrase was chosen as the title of an exhibition of paintings by the young artist Sarah Lucas in London in 1995.

get up one’s nose vb British

to irritate, annoy. A colourful vulgarism used by both sexes since its popularisation in TV comedies of the late 1960s, notably Steptoe and Son and Till Death us do Part.

It really gets up my nose the way he harps on about his work.

get wood vb British

to have an erection. A phrase popularised by Viz comic from the 1990s.

ghetto adj American

cheap, of poor quality, in poor taste, old, broken down. The term is not racist, but is primarily in use among white adolescents.

ghora, gora n

a white person. A Hindi word used by South Asians of several ethnic backgrounds in the UK.

ghora-fied adj

seen as typical or representative of white culture. A term, often pejorative or at least critical, used by British Asians.

ghost1 vb American

to depart, leave. This item of black street slang, adopted also by white adolescents in the 1990s, is probably related to the phrase git ghost.

ghost2 adj American

absent, missing, unseen. A key term from the lexicon of street gangs and aficionados of rap and hip hop since the 1990s. Used in this way the word has evoked disappearance and invisibility in black speech for two decades or more.

They came for us but we was ghost. Get ghost!

ghost turds n pl American

another expression for dust bunnies

gib vb British

to talk gibberish. An item of student slang in use in London and elsewhere since around 2000.

G.I.B. adj American

sexually accomplished and/or sexually active. The euphemistic abbreviation of ‘good in bed’ is spoken as its constituent letters, not as an acronym.

gibbing n British

gatecrashing. This term was in use among bouncers and security men during the 1990s. Its origin is obscure.

gig1 n

a. a musical engagement or performance. One of many terms, originating among pre-World War II jazz musicians in the USA, which were adopted by the rock-music milieu in the 1960s. The exact origin of the word is obscure, but may be related to ‘jig’ in the sense of a dance.

‘These lads are professional musicians and gigs are their bread and butter.’ (News of the World, 29 May 1988)

b. an appointment, session, stint or activity. Particularly in the 1970s, the musicians’ term was extended to refer to any one-off engagement or event (thus sometimes performing as a synonym of trip or scene).

I’ve got the feeling this party isn’t really my gig.

187

git

gig2 vb

to perform at a gig or (more often) a series of gigs. An item of musicians’ jargon.

‘These guys [The Grateful Dead] will be gigging beyond the grave.’

(Independent, 26 February 1988)

gigantic adj British

excellent. A vogue term among British adolescents in the 1990s as an adjective or exclamation.

giggle-stick n

a joint, cannabis cigarette. A jocular expression, typically used by middleclass students or otherwise respectable adults since the early 1970s. It is not part of the lexicon of hardened drug users.

giggle water n

alcoholic drink, particularly champagne or exotic spirits. An ingenue’s jocular expression for the potential cause of unaccustomed hilarity.

gilbert n British See green gilbert

gimme five! exclamation

an invitation to slap palms as a ritualised greeting or sign of solidarity

gimmer, gim n British

a foolish, clumsy or unfortunate person. The words originated as Scottish and northern English dialect terms for a helpless young ewe or old sheep. They are still used primarily as contemptuous descriptions of females.

gimp n

1a. a crippled or lame person, especially an old one. The term is thought to derive from a blend of grandfather and limp. The adjective ‘gimpy’ is applied, often derisively, to anything or anyone clumsy or crippled.

1b. an awkward, ineffectual or clumsy person. By extension from the first sense above. The word is popular among schoolchildren.

2. a sexually promiscuous male

gimpiny n British

a version of gimp 1b in use among students in 2005

ginger n, adj British

(a person who is) homosexual. Rhyming slang from ‘ginger beer’: queer. A piece of pre-World War II London working-class argot which is very much alive in spite of the decline in ginger-beer drinking.

gink n

1. an awkward, ugly, foolish or clumsy person. The word is at least 100 years old

in Britain and America, but its origin is obscure; it may be an invention, or derive from either Scottish dialect or Turkish or Arabic via Romany. Before the 1950s the word also meant simply a person, without the pejorative overtones.

Who’s the shortsighted gink in the corner?

2. British a bad smell, stink. The word, which is probably lowland Scottish in origin, also occurs in the form of the verb ‘to gink’.

Giorgio Armani n British

a sandwich. A rhyming slang phrase heard since the late 1990s. The rhyme is with sarnie and the name of the Italian fashion designer.

gippo n See gyppo

gippy tummy n See gyppy tummy

girl-cott vb

to boycott. A feminist alternative, coined in the 1980s and used both facetiously and seriously.

girlfriend n American

a female companion, member of one’s circle or gang. This use of the word arose among black adolescents in the late 1970s and by the 1990s had become a common term of address among younger females across the USA. The word is sometimes abbreviated to ‘girlf’.

girlie n British

a weak or effeminate person, a sissy. A schoolboy expression of derision adopted facetiously by some adult males.

girl’s blouse n British See big girl’s blouse

gism n

an alternative spelling of jissom

gismo, gizmo n

a gadget, unnamed object. An American armed-forces’ term adopted in Britain since the 1960s.

git n British

an unpleasant or worthless person. Many saloon-bar lexicologists have claimed that this word is an Arabic term of abuse, meaning ‘pregnant camel’, which was imported by servicemen who had been stationed in Egypt. The Arabic word does exist, but was probably noticed by British soldiers because the word git, a southern pronunciation of get (bastard or fool), was already part of their stock of vulgarisms.

git ghost

188

‘A frightfully clever chap called Stephen Fry, sending up all those smug gits who present kids’ TV. (Hmmm… comes across as a bit of a smug git himself.)’ (News of the World, 15 May 1988)

git ghost vb American

to behave discreetly, ‘keep a low profile’. An item of black street-talk that was included in so-called Ebonics, recognised as a legitimate language variety by school officials in Oakland, California, in late 1996.

git-go n American

the outset, beginning. The term is usually heard in the phrase ‘from the gitgo’.

git wid it vb American

to become alert, streetwise, adapt to the current situation. An imitation of the earlier colloquial phrase ‘get with it’, spoken with an Afro-Caribbean accent. An item of black street-talk that was included in so-called Ebonics, recognised as a legitimate language variety by school officials in Oakland, California, in late 1996.

give (someone) a portion vb British

to have sex. The vulgarism describes the sex act from the male point of view and has been popularised in the broadcast media, e.g., by the TV comedy series Hale and Pace in 1996.

give a toss/fuck/flying fuck vb British to concern oneself, care. Almost invariably used negatively, these phrases, recorded since the early 1970s, but perhaps slightly older, are successors to the old dismissive or insouciant expressions ‘(don’t) give a damn/fig’.

See also Kate Moss

give (someone) face vb American

to affront, provoke, deride. An item of black street slang heard in the 1990s.

‘Are you giving me face?

What the hell does that mean?’

(Made in America, US film, 1993)

give head vb American

(to be willing) to perform fellatio. A male term from the 1950s and 1960s, used typically by college students or servicemen during the hippy period of sexual experimentation. The phrase, and indeed the practice, seemed to assume a real and symbolic importance in male sexuality in the USA, far greater than in Britain and Australia. The term has occasionally been applied to cunnilingus. (Since the 1980s the words skull or ‘some skull’

have occasionally been substituted for head.)

‘But she never lost her head, even when she was giving head.’

(‘Walk on the Wild Side’, written and recorded by Lou Reed, 1972)

give it a burl vb See burl

give it beans vb British

to perform energetically, as in dancing or sex. The term was recorded on the Student World website in 2001.

give it large vb British

an alternative form of large it

give it one, give her one vb British

to have sex (with a woman). A male vulgarism which has been commonly heard from the 1980s, both in boastful or assertive male conversation and in parodies thereof. A common elaboration is ‘Give her one for the boys’.

give it some cog vb British

to accelerate, increase power and speed. A motorcyclist’s term since the 1980s. Cog is jargon for gear.

give it some wellie vb See wellie1 1a

give it the berries vb British

to act energetically, increase power and/ or speed. The phrase was used by presenters on the tv car programme Top Gear in 2005.

give it toes vb British

to run away, escape. Recorded from the mid-1980s and heard particularly in the Merseyside area, this is a synonym for the London criminal slang have it away on one’s toes.

give it up vb

to accede to a request for sex

That slapper gives it up easily. give it up! exclamation

a.a demand by a mugger to give up one’s money, possessions, etc.

b.an exclamation of joy or solidarity

In the second sense the phrase became a fashionable cry uttered by aficionados of dancefloor culture since the mid-1990s.

give someone evil(s) vb British

to look menacingly or angrily at. An item of playground slang. Eviling is an alternative form.

give (someone) the arse/boot/heave-ho/ elbow vb Australian

to get rid of, jilt or dismiss someone; variations of give someone the wellie

189

gnarly

give (someone/something) the wellie vb British

a.to dismiss (someone) from work

b.to reject (a partner)

c.to discard (an object).

Compare wellie

In all senses the expression is a variant form of the colloquial give someone the boot.

give (someone) togg outs vb British

to attack, beat up. An item of teenage playground slang of the 1990s, recorded among schoolboys in North London. The origin of the phrase is obscure: tog(g)s might logically mean ‘blows/ punches’ but the word has not been recorded in that sense previously; it may have arisen in black British street slang.

glar, glah n British

paint. A term used by house painters and artists in London which has not apparently been previously recorded in writing. The origin is obscure, although some connection with glare, gloss or glue seems possible.

‘Go on, slop on some more of the old glar.’

(Recorded, mural artist, Vauxhall, London, 1974)

glare vb British

to intimidate. A term used by young street-gang members in London since around 2000.

He was glaring her.

Glasgow kiss n British

a head-butt. The term, sometimes also expressed as ‘Glasgow handshake’, dates from the 1960s. Gorbals kiss is a synonym.

glass n

diamonds or other gems in underworld argot

glasshouse n British

an army prison. The military detention centre at Aldershot barracks had a glass roof in the early years of the 20th century and was notorious for the severity of its regime. Known as the ‘Glass House’ to inmates, it gave its name to other similar establishments.

Glen n British

an easy task. The phrase is based on the rhyme Glen Hoddle (the UK soccer star and manager) and the colloquial term ‘doddle’. An item of student slang in

use in London and elsewhere since around 2000.

glitch n

a snag, an unforeseen fault or malfunction. This piece of aerospace technicians’ jargon from the late 1960s has entered the common vocabulary in the era of high technology, referring particularly to computer problems. It is either a blend of gremlin and hitch, or from a Yiddish version of the German glitschen, meaning to slip.

glitz n

glamour, (pseudo)sophisticated showiness. The word is a blend of glamour, ritzy and glitter and is probably a backformation from glitzy. The term is usually used with a degree of implied criticism; it evokes superficiality and ‘brittleness’. The word seems to have been an invention of journalists and writers in about 1984. In 1985 it was used as the title of a crime thriller by the American author Elmore Leonard.

‘Here [Liberia] there is little glitz to the evangelical churches.’

(Sunday Correspondent, 17 September 1989)

glitzy adj

glamorous, showy. A vogue word from 1985 to 1987, used particularly by journalists, evoking materialistic but superficial glamour. It is generally more negative than positive in its connotations.

See also glitz

glomp vb American

to jump and hug someone from behind. An expression used on campus in the USA since around 2000.

glop vb British

to drink alcohol, particularly to swill beer. A student term of the 1980s.

‘Glop, don’t stop.’

(Slogan in urinal, University of Essex, 1987)

glory-hole n American

a hole in a partition between two toilet cubicles, enabling voyeurism or communication by (usually male) gays

glug vb, n

(to take) a drink or drinks of alcohol. A word which imitates the gurgle of pouring or swallowing.

gnarly adj American

1.excellent

2.awful, inadequate

go

190

Both senses of the word have been beloved by Valley Girls and their teenage imitators in the USA since the mid-1970s. The word is thought to have originated in surfing jargon in the 1960s, referring to the texture of waves. By 1989 Tatler magazine reported the word as being in use among schoolboys at Eton. It is sometimes spelt narly.

go vb

to be sexually active and/or enthusiastic. The word is used in this sense, particularly in Britain, of women by men; its vulgarity was highlighted in the ‘Nudge nudge, wink, wink’ sketch by Eric Idle in the British TV series, Monty Python’s Flying Circus (1970), in which he badgers a fellow drinker with importunate questions such as:.

Your wife…does she go? I bet she does.

See also goer

go ape vb See ape(shit)

goat heaven n

a state of unfettered freedom, enjoyment, indulgence. The phrase, in use since 2000 and of uncertain geographical origin (it is popular in the Caribbean), evokes both bliss and excess.

go at it vb British

to have sex. A vulgar euphemism popular with adolescents in the mid-1990s. The colloquial phrase denotes any vigorous performance, but its meaning has become specified in slang usage.

‘They can’t wait to go at it, both of them!’

(Recorded, London University student, October 1996)

gob1 n British

the mouth. The word was originally Irish and Scottish Gaelic for beak or mouth, becoming a British dialect term in about the 16th century. It is still more widespread (and considered less vulgar) in Ireland, in Liverpool, where the influence of Irish speech is strong, and in the north of England, where the influence of post-Gaelic dialect lingers. In southern England it is mainly a schoolchildren’s word.

gob2 vb

to spit. The ritualistic spitting at groups performing on stage indulged in by punks from 1976 onwards was known as ‘gobbing’.

gobble, gobble off vb, n

(to perform) oral sex, particularly fellatio. A vulgarism which is most widespread in Britain.

gobby adj British

excessively loquacious, boastful. Based on gob, the term is a slang version of the colloquial ‘gabby’.

go belly-up vb

a.to die

‘Just another fat junkie who went bellyup.’

(Tatler, October 1989)

b.to fail or collapse. Said typically of a business or other venture.

‘He lost all his equity when the firm went belly-up in the recession of ’81.’

(Wall Street, US film, 1987)

These senses are based on the image of a dying fish or a supine dead animal.

c. to give in, yield, submit. This refers to the animal behaviour whereby the soft underparts are exposed to an adversary as a sign of submission.

gob-grabbing n British

passing illicit objects or substances covertly from mouth to mouth. An item of prisoners’ slang.

‘If you went to hug a fellow-prisoner, wouldn’t he suspect you of attempting a “gob-grabbing”…?’

(Will Self writing in the Evening Standard magazine, September 1993)

gob job n British

an act of oral sex, usually referring to fellatio. A vulgarism from the late 1960s.

go blow! exclamation

used for telling someone to go away

‘So take a piece of u own medicine and GO BLOW (oops did dat offend u?).’

(Recorded, contributor to www.wass- up.com, November 2003)

go Borneo vb American

a.to get drunk

b.to behave outrageously, go too far

Both senses are preppie terms indicating a regression to a supposed primitive jungle mentality, influenced by the numerous ‘wild men of Borneo’ featured in travelling freak shows and the wrestling ring over the years. (The original tales of wild men living in the unexplored jungles of Borneo probably arose from the first reports of the orang-utan.)

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goggy

gobshite n British

a contemptible person. A Liverpudlian and northern term of abuse which, since the 1960s, has spread to other areas of Britain including London. It usually indicates great distaste or contempt (gob refers to the mouth and shite to excrement; both are regional vulgarisms).

gobslutch n British

a slovenly, messy person; someone with dirty personal habits, especially eating habits. A term from the north of England, heard in the long-running TV soap opera

Coronation Street. (Gob refers to the mouth, ‘slutch’ is a variant form of slush.)

gobsmacked, gob-struck adj British astonished, struck dumb, left openmouthed in amazement. From gob. These are originally Liverpudlian terms and are now widespread, used even by

Sloane Rangers and yuppies, thanks initially to usage on TV comedies set in Liverpool. The expressions enjoyed a vogue in popular speech and journalistic use from 1988. The phrases originally referred to a victim gaping after literally being punched in the mouth.

‘He had expected to pay one tenth of the price and was said to be “gobsmacked” at the final cost.’

(Independent, 21 September 1989)

gobsmacking adj British

astonishing. A more recent derivation of gobsmacked.

‘… but when Casaubon observes, “Life isn’t simple, the way it is in detective stories”, the gobsmacking banality can only be the author’s.’

(Hugo Barnacle reviewing Umberto Eco, Independent, 14 October 1989)

go bush vb Australian

to go native, become countrified.

See also bush1; bushie

go commando vb British

to dispense with underwear when otherwise clothed. The expression probably did originate in military usage but by 2005 was in use among fashion designers, journalists etc.

God-botherer n British

an excessively pious person or a clergyman. A mainly middle-class expression applied particularly to institutional holy men such as prison and army chaplains, or to members of evangelical movements. The phrase has inspired the more

frivolous non-specific insult, dog-both- erer.

God forbids n pl

children, kids. The rhyming-slang phrase is synonymous with saucepan lids and dustbin lids, and was still in use in 2004.

Try not to wake up the God forbids.

go down vb American

to take place, happen. A phrase from black street slang which became widespread in the later 1960s.

go down (on) vb

to perform oral sex. The term is used by, and applied to, both sexes; until the late 1960s it was a predominantly American expression. Elaborations used by highschool and college students included ‘go down like water/like a submarine’ (usually indicating shock at a person’s readiness to indulge in this behaviour).

God squad, the n British

the forces of organized religion, especially in evangelical form. The phrase has been applied scornfully to the Salvation Army, doorstep zealots and university Christian Unions alike, from the late 1950s to the present.

goer n

a sexually active and enthusiastic person; in the past, almost always said of women by men. The word can express admiration and approval or astonishment, though rarely moral disdain.

gofer n

a minion or assistant who runs errands or delivers messages, etc. The word, originally an Americanism from the film industry (where it is now a job title), is a pun on ‘go for (something)’ and gopher, the North American burrowing rodent

gogglebox n

a television set. This term has been in use since the late 1950s. At first used pejoratively by those disapproving of TV, then ironically by viewing enthusiasts, the word is now semantically neutral.

goggles n pl

spectacles, or someone wearing them. A schoolchildren’s word.

goggy n British

a misfit, a pupil rejected by schoolfellows. This invented term was reported by Tatler in September 1989 to be in current use at Eton College. (Synonyms are gunk, spod, Wendy and zoid.)

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