Lemon cake = fake
In cockney rhyming slang (East London) it is "Rosie Lee".
The term "Joe Dakcky" or "Joey" is a cockney slang word referring to "Pakees" The Usage of this word is racist.
*correction* Whilst not cockney RHYMING slang, it is cockney slang- cockney slang for Anal Sex or 'buggery'This is slang and this is UK slang but not cockney rhyming slang as best I can determine. Sailor cake or more commonly referred to as navy cake is when two men engage in activities from behind. To be rhyming slang the word cake would have to rhyme with the referent. In this case, it does not. Example; apples and pears for stairs, trouble and strife for wife, china plate for mate. This is straight forward slang such as apron for flag, blagged for robbed or bloody for, well, what ever that is supposed to mean.
if someone says, 'you melt' or 'he's such a melt' it generally means, 'silly' or 'you idiot'. its a light hearted joke.
NO! A swear word is one that wishes something a person ... Like i hope you Die or i hope you feel better ...
The word is Cockney slang for "detective".
sexton Blake
In cockney rhyming slang (East London) it is "Rosie Lee".
The term "Joe Dakcky" or "Joey" is a cockney slang word referring to "Pakees" The Usage of this word is racist.
*correction* Whilst not cockney RHYMING slang, it is cockney slang- cockney slang for Anal Sex or 'buggery'This is slang and this is UK slang but not cockney rhyming slang as best I can determine. Sailor cake or more commonly referred to as navy cake is when two men engage in activities from behind. To be rhyming slang the word cake would have to rhyme with the referent. In this case, it does not. Example; apples and pears for stairs, trouble and strife for wife, china plate for mate. This is straight forward slang such as apron for flag, blagged for robbed or bloody for, well, what ever that is supposed to mean.
five hundred A monkey = £500 in cockney rhyming slang.
if someone says, 'you melt' or 'he's such a melt' it generally means, 'silly' or 'you idiot'. its a light hearted joke.
The word "dog" originates from Middle English "dogge," which was used to refer to a type of canine breed. Its ultimate origin is uncertain, but it is believed to have evolved from Old English "docga" or "dogga."
NO! A swear word is one that wishes something a person ... Like i hope you Die or i hope you feel better ...
The original punter was someone who 'poled' a flat bottom boat for relaxation on English rivers. After WW2 it was a Cockney slang word for people with money to be fleeced. -In American terms, -a 'mark'
"Whistle and flute" is (Cockney) rhyming slang for suit. Generally, such slang is abridged to one word, losing the one which rhymes, making it difficult to get the reference. So a suit might be referred to as a 'whistle'. Few Cockneys use "Cockney rhyming slang" anymore and a lot of other people use it nowadays.
"Kooshty" is a slang term that originated in Britain, meaning "good" or "fine." It is often used informally to describe something that is pleasant or satisfactory.