Plates of meat is rhyming slang for feet.
In cockney rhyming slang it's "Plates of meat". Gunboats, trotters , hooves , dogs .
In the old (London) Cockney rhyming slang: "apple & pears" = stairs, "trouble & strife" = wife, "plates of meat" = feet
It is a desire to eat meat.
It's believed to have started with rhyming slang - "dog's meat" meaning feet.
Car tag means your licence plates.Just slang for licence plates
FRESH MEAT
Rhyming slang is associated with the Cockneys of East London and involves substituting a common word with a phrase which rhymes. eg plates of meat instead of feet or apples and pears instead of stairs or tit for tat instead of hat or Barnet fair instead of hair. Often the rhyming phrase gets shortened eg Barnet Fair to barnet So a Cockney might say "Hang on. I'll just pop up the apples and pears, comb me barnet and get me titfer. ___________________ Commonley, Cockney rhyming slang only uses the first word of the rhyming phrase. So trouble means trouble and strife - wife; heading up the apples means climbing the apples and pears - stairs; these boots won't fit me plates refers to plates of meat - feet; how are you, me old china means how are you: china plate - mate, and so on. I've heard a friend speaking of a trip out to the country and shooting a few nuns for dinner. Nun's habits - rabbits. ____________________
"Banger" or "Snag" is Australian slang for the BBQ'ing type of sausage, also known as a "mystery bag" because of the questionable meat content.
The likely word sought is bologna (finely ground meat sausage).The slang pronunciation is used for the term baloneymeaning nonsense.
The dictionary says slang for horse is heroin. 50 years ago my father teased fast food burgers were horse meat. He called them heroin meat.
Wash a manual meat grinder in hot water with a mild dish detergent. After washing, make sure the extrusion plates are completely dry.
Dogs, as a slang word for feet, is in question. One member asked that the question be referenced. I can only do so through personal experience. As a 73-year-old woman, I heard the term used often in my yonger days. Always, as I recollect, the term dogs was used to express how your feet felt after a long day of shopping. For example: "Whew, my dogs are barking!" I was around when pointed toe shoes made their appearance in the 50s and perhaps it was those foot killers that inspired women to use that expression. Cockney rhyming slang; Plates (of meat)