Apple core
Bobby Moore
(from 'score')
Fifty Pounds is commonly referred to as a 'bullseye' in cockney rhiming slang. The reference comes from the world of darts, where the centre of the dart board (the bullseye) is worth 50.
bag
A 'Grand" is a slang term for one thousand pounds - £1,000 - or $1,000, or other currency.
( k ) Slang One thousand dollars.
NO! A swear word is one that wishes something a person ... Like i hope you Die or i hope you feel better ...
One thousand pounds.
Large, great, impressive. In slang, it means one thousand.
"Little" in Cockney rhyming slang is often referred to as "dicky bird".
A 'Grand" is a slang term for one thousand pounds - £1,000 - or $1,000, or other currency.
"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.
One million pounds is equal to one thousand thousand pounds.
Cockney rhyming slang is believed to have originated in the East End of London during the 19th century as a way for people to communicate without others understanding them. By substituting a word with a rhyming phrase (where the rhyming word is omitted), it allowed speakers to convey meaning while creating confusion for outsiders. Over time, it became a part of the cultural fabric of London's working-class community.
One million pounds = one thousand thousand pounds
( k ) Slang One thousand dollars.
Ten hundred thousand pounds in one million pounds.
It is: ten thousand pounds
There are one thousand millions in a billion. For pounds, and everything else.
£1,100,000 is one millione one hundred thousand pounds in figures
NO! A swear word is one that wishes something a person ... Like i hope you Die or i hope you feel better ...