tall brawl
tall brawl
"Pet theft" could be a pair of rhyming words meaning a little heist.
Thrown
Have the same meaning or not, it is a rhyming word.
Cares, Fairs, snares, flairs ...
In Cockney rhyming slang - apples means 'stairs'.Read more at:apples-rhyming-slang
The English London Cockney rhyming slang is: tea leaf meaning thief.
A rhyming word for "needn't" is sedent (an adjective meaning seated, quiet, or inactive).
Smartass Lass, sassy lassie
Lucky guess.
Cockney rhyming slang was a form of coded language used by working-class Londoners to communicate without being understood by outsiders. It involved substituting a word with a rhyming phrase, using the non-rhyming portion of the phrase to convey the intended meaning. This form of slang was popular in the early 20th century but has since declined in usage.
"Jacksy" meaning "on their own" originates from the English/Cockney rhyming slang for being "Alone". This was "Jack Jones", a popular singer in the 1960s. True rhyming slang use would be to say "I'm on my Jack", which through the rhyming convention would imply "Jones", which rhymes with "Alone". The "I'm on my Jack" expression became more obfuscated and ended up as "On my Jacksy".