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AnswerA Cockney is (usually) a working class person from London, England - particularly from the East End of London.Traditionally, to qualify to be a Cockney you had to be born within earshot of "The Bow Bells" - that is the bells of the Church of St. Mary le Bow, in London.An abode is where someone lives, so it could be the East End of London, or a person's house in that area.A Cockney's Abode is also known as "ome".(that's how they pronounce home)
The term "cockney" refers to an area, not a gender. Anyone born in that area of London is called Cockney, whether they are male or female.
The Cockney rhyming slang expression for "wife" is "trouble and strife".
In Cockney slang, "Garrett" is a term used to refer to a cigarette. Cockney slang often involves rhyming words or phrases, where the intended word is replaced with a rhyming phrase to create a coded language. In this case, "Garrett" rhymes with "carrot," which is why it is used as a substitute term for a cigarette in Cockney rhyming slang.
This use refers the term hades to the abode of the dead in general, rather than the abode of the wicked.
Abade is an obsolete term for abode, a place of living.
Ondřej ,,Otin'' Kratochvíl
The earliest recorded use of "cockney" was in 1372. In a poem by William Langland, the word means a small, misshapen egg.By 1521, the term's meaning had changed, and country people used "cockney" to refer to an effeminate city man.The modern meaning of an East Ender born within the sound of the Bow Bells was coined in 1600. Samuel Rowlands referred to a "Bowe-Bell Cockney" in his satire, The Letting of Humours Blood in the Head-Vaine.
The term "Joe Dakcky" or "Joey" is a cockney slang word referring to "Pakees" The Usage of this word is racist.
Cockney Rejects was created in 1979.