Normel
"You have got" = "You have", as in "You have a book on good grammar". The latter clause is the more correct. The word "got" is very common in speech, but slang and totally superflous.
For
fine
One quid (it is a slang word) equals one pound (£).
Noobs is a slang term. It means new people who are not trained to do some task yet.
It is a US slang expression meaning a common thief.
Idiomatic expression of discontent and or annoyance with somebody.
"To hurry" is not a slang term. It is an ordinary verb meaning to speed up, to rush, to increase the level of activity.
The expression, "It's nothing to shake a stick at" means it is important.
It is a slang expression, meaning "call me" or "find me". It has nothing to do with actually hitting/punching a person.
It is a slang expression meaning to nag, yell, or be upset at someone for something or even nothing but just for the sake of nagging, or "ragging on someone".
No, an idiom is not a slang word. An idiom is a commonly used expression with a figurative meaning that is different from its literal meaning. Slang, on the other hand, refers to informal words and phrases that are specific to a particular group or generation.
it's not really slang but now it is used or can be used at way to be classic...meaning way to be typical.
In many countries, truancy (from school) is called wagging, "jigging", ditching, or skipping school. Other slang terms are bunking (off), skiving, mitching, twagging, or on the knock.
As a slang term, it means to pump up someone's ego, to inflate their self-confidence.
"cx" does not have a literal meaning it more represents a typed facial expression. It represents a happy/surprised face.
Helter Skelter is a slang expression meaning chaos. Charles Manson's use of the expression meant an upheaval or uprising, a race war between whites and blacks.