Apple core
Bobby Moore
(from 'score')
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.
There isn't a cockney rhyme that means little; perhaps you'd like to create one!
A 'Grand" is a slang term for one thousand pounds - £1,000 - or $1,000, or other currency.
The Cockney term for abode is "apartment" or more commonly "gaff." In Cockney rhyming slang, "gaff" is often used to refer to one's home or place of residence.
"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 = one thousand thousand pounds
There are 1,000 pounds in a thousand pounds, so to find out how many thousand pounds make a million pounds, you would divide 1,000,000 by 1,000. Therefore, there are 1,000 thousand pounds in a million pounds.
( k ) Slang One thousand dollars.
Ten hundred thousand pounds in one million pounds.
There are one million thousand pounds in a trillion pounds.
It is: ten thousand pounds
NO! A swear word is one that wishes something a person ... Like i hope you Die or i hope you feel better ...
The origins of Cockney Rhyming Slang are uncertain, and it's difficult to attribute its invention to one individual. It developed in the East End of London among the working-class community in the 19th and early 20th centuries. It is believed to have been a code language used to prevent outsiders from understanding conversations.