answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

In Cockney Rhyming Slang, the slang for mess is Elliot Ness, 'Blimy young Peter's bedroom is in a right elliot'

User Avatar

Wiki User

15y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar
More answers
User Avatar

Wiki User

7y ago

Slits in a dress

This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: How do you say - mess - in Cockney Rhyming Slang?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

How do you say - milk - in Cockney Rhyming Slang?

In Cockney Rhyming Slang, the slang for milk is Kilroy Silk, "Gotta av a drop'a Kilroy on me Cornflakes"


How do you say - stairs - in Cockney Rhyming Slang?

In Cockney Rhyming Slang, the slang for stairs is Apples and Pears; * We need a new carpet for the apples and pears. * Goodnight dear I'm going up the Apples and pears to Bedfordshire.


What does 'apron' mean in cockney slang?

Flag. Apron is a lower class way to say flag. It is not necessarily cockney and definitely not rhyming slang. It originates in the Victorian era and used predominately by the lower class.


What is another way to say 50 note?

There are several ways one may refer to a 50 note, such as 'Reddies'. 'Niftys' or 'Bullseye', for example is Cockney rhyming slang for a fifty pound note.


Origin of the phrase on their Jacksy meaning on their own?

"Jacksy" meaning "on their own" originates from the English/Cockney rhyming slang for being "Alone". This was "Jack Jones", a popular singer in the 1960s. True rhyming slang use would be to say "I'm on my Jack", which through the rhyming convention would imply "Jones", which rhymes with "Alone". The "I'm on my Jack" expression became more obfuscated and ended up as "On my Jacksy".


What does rhyming slang mean?

Rhyming slang is a type of slang where a word or phrase is replaced with a rhyming word or phrase. It originated in the East End of London in the 19th century and is often used for humor or secrecy. For example, "apples and pears" is rhyming slang for stairs.


What word is Australian slang for a friend?

The Adult way to say friend is '' Mate'' and most teenagers say '' braa'' as in bro


How is Cockney different to standard English?

First off they have a terrible accent - worse than Dick van Dyke in Mary Poppins - and it does sound like Gor Blimey , Guvnor, what a smashing mo'or. They pronounce thr as fr so the word three sounds like free. And they have the famous rhyming slang - where they say apples and pears instead of stairs, and trouble and strife instead of wife.


How do you say hot mess in french?

How do you say "hot mess" in french


What is a hot mess?

When you say someone is a hot mess it means they are ugly, weird. When you say he's some hot mess then hes hot, cool. Get it?


What is the definition of suicide in slang?

In contemporary slang, to say a person committed suicide is to say he "offed himself".


What percent of the Australian population uses slang?

You would find that, without realising it, close to 100% of Australians would use slang in one form or another. The younger generation would use "American slang" quite heavily, being influenced by US television shows. The remaining generations fall into several groups. Some use the classic Australian slang, with words such as "fair dinkum", "true blue", etc, whilst others use slang derived from other countries, including cockney sland from England. Even those people who say they "never use slang" might be surprised to find out how much of their language really is derived from slang in one form or another.