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.
In Cockney Rhyming Slang, the slang for road is Frog and Toad, "mind how you cross the toad my son."
In Cockney Rhyming Slang, the slang for kid (child) is Saucepan Lid, "Keep your eye on the saucepan, he's playing in the garden"
In Cockney Rhyming Slang, the slang for curry is Ruby Murray, "Just off out with the lads for a ruby", or "could murder a good ruby tonight"
In Cockney Rhyming Slang, the slang for crazy is Patrick Swayze, "Your mates had too much to drink and hes gone Patrick!" ..... "They took Henry off to the funny farm, he went abit Patrick"
Frog and Toad
Fred McMurray
Gert and Daisy
God forbid
In Cockney Rhyming Slang, the slang for milk is Kilroy Silk, "Gotta av a drop'a Kilroy on me Cornflakes"
In Cockney Rhyming Slang, the slang for mess is Elliot Ness, 'Blimy young Peter's bedroom is in a right elliot'
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.
"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".
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.
In Cockney Rhyming Slang, the slang for milk is Kilroy Silk, "Gotta av a drop'a Kilroy on me Cornflakes"
In Cockney Rhyming Slang, the slang for mess is Elliot Ness, 'Blimy young Peter's bedroom is in a right elliot'
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.
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.
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.
"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".
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.
The Adult way to say friend is '' Mate'' and most teenagers say '' braa'' as in bro
To speak back slang, you need to reverse the order of the sounds in each syllable of a word. For example, "hello" becomes "olleh." It's a fun way to communicate that originated in Cockney rhyming slang in London.
It depends. If you're describing someone who is actually standing on a step or walking up or down the stairs, you would say "on the stairs". If a person were standing in front of the stairs, you could say "at the stairs" or "at the staircase".
Stairs is "die Treppe"
To say "go up the stairs" in French, you would say "monter les escaliers."