poodle haircut, pageboy for a few..
Fake Out is 50's slang for a bad datejacketed: dating only one person was also called "going steady".
the word haircut is indeed a verb
A popular slang term for leaving in the 1950s was "split," as in "Let's split this joint."
It can be. It can be a reference to sex. It can also mean a haircut, as in "just a trim." The word "trim" means either slim or slender, or to make something thinner or more slender.
I got a haircut today. My haircut cost me $12.00 dollars. He did not give me a decent looking haircut.
It is a slang term for the word money It is a slang term for the word money It is a slang term for the word money is a slang term for the word money is a slang term for the word money
First attested as urban (scholatic) slang 1950s U.S. Possible portmanteau of 'doo-doo' and 'goofus', most often seen spelt 'doofus'.
Buzz IS a slang word.
Your haircut looks very silly.I need to go and get a haircut.I took my dog to the parlour yesterday to get a doggy haircut.
A Yank tank is Australian slang for an extravagent American car, or United States slang to a pre-1950s American car in Cuba.
The term "baloney" emerged in the 1950s as slang for nonsense or foolishness. It likely derives from the idea that bologna sausage (or baloney) is made up of various mixed meats, hence something that is a mixture of different things and therefore nonsensical.