"What's up" is used quite often. Although "you alright?" is used a lot as well.
There isn't really any slang for it. It's usually "what's up", "how are you" or "You all right?"
Pregnant. Slang terms include bun in the oven, preggers, up the duff, expecting.
Quids
Jollies?
Cockney rhyming slang is believed to have originated in the mid-19th century among the working-class population in the East End of London, primarily among market traders and street sellers. It was a way for them to communicate without being understood by outsiders or authorities.
I've never heard that, though it is possible . - in England it is slang for thick fog.
"pump" in the north of England.
A woman's vagina.
Yes! "Telly" is slang for television in England.
it's slang for £1 - one pound
A yett is a slang term for a gate, particularly in Northern England.
The slang meaning of "what up" is, what are you thinking about, or what does one have his or her attention on? It can also be in the form "what's up" or "what is up".
A "butty" is a slang term for a sandwich, used in England and New Zealand.