Mag or Meg
No, "noodle" is a slang term for a type of pasta. It is not commonly used as a slang name for head.
It is impolite and discriminatory to use slang names for people/a culture. I suggest that you forget it learning such things, so I refuse to tell you even though I know it. Think about how you want to be called by others before you call someone a slang name.
It's archaic, but it's a word - it means mouth.
There is no root for yeah because it IS a single word and never a root word. It is also slang for YES.
The spelling lam is a slang word, used in the phrase "on the lam" (fleeing). It is also an archaic verb meaning to beat or thrash.The correct spelling for a baby sheep is a lamb.
"Brown" was a slang term commonly used in London to refer to the obsolete Halfpenny.
Chelsea Halfpenny's birth name is Chelsea Halfpenny Stell.
Tony Halfpenny's birth name is Edward Anthony S. Halfpenny.
An apeth is a slang term for the value of a halfpenny, or a silly person, from the word ha'p'orth.
The Halfpenny was usually referred to as a "Ha'penny" (pronounced Hayp-nee) although this could be bent quite a bit by regional accents. Slang terms used for the Halfpenny would depend on where and when the expression was used. Two slang terms used for the Halfpenny were - Bawbee - by a long evolutionary process, this term was ultimately derived from the French "Bas" referring to debased copper coins. Halfpennies, before halfpenny coins were minted, were produced by cutting Pennies in half. Brown - a very old term. Slang does not need to make sense, it merely needs to be thought of and spoken by somebody, have an appeal to somebody else, and be reused often enough to become a part of the local idiom.
An archaic and probably obsolete slang term for Marijuana.
Sulfur used to be called "brimstone".
ho (archaic interjection) = ho (הו) or hoy (הוי) ho (slang for whore) = zonah (×–×•× ×”)
ousel
no other name
When used as someones surname, it is pronounced "Harfpenny"
tweeny