30 pounds
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.
I can't find any cockney slang called "gorilla" but a monkey is 500 pounds.
50p.. It comes from the shape of the coin, i.e the edges
Skipper isn't necessarily pirate slang as much as generally nautical slang: It means the captain or leader of the crew.
Slang changes with vocabulary and the times, much of it coming from the military of all countries
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.
I can't find any cockney slang called "gorilla" but a monkey is 500 pounds.
In Cockney slang a monkey is £500.
Five hundred pounds
50p.. It comes from the shape of the coin, i.e the edges
The languages spoken in England are international much like as in the USA.Our native language is English.Here in London there is also the "Cockney rhyming slang"...which is a secret language known and spoken by the "Cockney's"...a Cockney is anybody that was born within the sound of the "Bow Bells" in the east-end of London,traditionally the working-class people.An example of Cockney rhyming slang could go like this "Come down them apples n pears,getcha daisy-roots on ya plates of meat,pop to the shop for some Rosie-Lee rags n once your back il make ya a nice hot cuppa Rosie"....................Which when translated means "Come downstairs,put your boots on your feet,go to the shop for some T-bags and when you get back i'l make you a nice cup of hot tea.".
I was thinking about buying new carpet. How much, on average, would a carpet installation cost me?
Ben was a greek meal muth like a hamburger ,without fries thank you "that will be £1.99 thankyou" It was cooked in a hot tub much loved by the poorpers in the city of kerplunk it is often refered to as nedock in rhyming 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.
The answer depends on the material and quality of the carpet.
It depends on how big the carpet is.
133.33 square yards of carpet