thread: Rhyming slang...

  1. #1
    Registered User

    Jan 2010
    1,975

    Rhyming slang...

    Do you use it?

    I didn't think that I did, but I often refer to the tomato sauce as 'dead horse'. Last night DH told me he was going to tuck some information into his 'sky rocket'.

    Aussie, much? So, what rhyming slang do you use?

  2. #2
    Registered User

    Feb 2006
    Mornington Peninsula, Vic
    1,624

    DH is from London so uses alot of the ****ney slang - eg - boat race = face, horse & cart = fart, apples and pears = stairs, can't think of any more.....

  3. #3
    Registered User

    Jan 2010
    1,975

    Ah... hit the frog and toad.

  4. #4
    Registered User
    Add Dansta on Facebook Follow Dansta On Twitter

    Jul 2008
    a slice of paridise, victoria
    2,680

    yep.
    dog n bone - phone
    i have a whole book on it some place...
    mad as a cut snake gets used alot 'round here.

  5. #5
    Registered User

    Nov 2008
    Perth, WA
    2,315

    What about to have a Captain Cook (look)?

  6. #6
    Registered User

    Aug 2006
    On the other side of this screen!!!
    11,129

    The only other one I know is "trouble and strife" = wife.

  7. #7
    Registered User

    Dec 2005
    In Bankworld with Barbara
    14,222

    Dh has a whole book on it too. Another one is 'having a Barry Crocker' - having a shocker.

  8. #8
    Registered User

    Jul 2006
    Melbourne
    4,895

    DH uses it all the time -
    Dead Horse - sauce
    Sgt Pepper - pepper
    Harold Holt - salt
    Wet as a shag on a rock

  9. #9
    Registered User
    Add helle on Facebook

    Sep 2008
    Bunbury, Western Australia
    3,963

    Pearl blister - sister.

    That's the only one I know ^^; beside the frog and toad

  10. #10
    Registered User

    Dec 2005
    In Bankworld with Barbara
    14,222

    OUr footy coach last year always used to say 'cheese and kisses' when talking about his fiance. I found a list of common slang if anyone is interested.

    • bag of fruit – "suit", as in suit and tie
    • barry - a "shocker", a poor performance, from the Australian crooner and actor Barry Crocker.
    • billy lids - "kids". Also tin lids or, more rarely, saucepan lids. Tin Lids was used by Jimmy Barnes' four children as their recording name.
    • Blundstone (boot) - "ute", utility vehicle, a tradesman's vehicle, from a popular brand of workman's boots.
    • boat race - the "face".
    • bread crumb - a "bum", a derelict
    • Bugs Bunny - "money"
    • Burke and Wills - "dills", from the Australian explorers Burke and Wills who died in the Outback, as in "Don't be a Burke." This is a backformation into rhyming slang, as "Don't be a Burke" should really be "Don't be a berk", a borrowing of British rhyming slang berk.
    • butcher's (hook) - "crook", ill, unwell; also, a "look".
    • captain - a "look" or to "look", from Captain James Cook, as in "Having a good Captain's, are ya?"
    • Charley Wheeler - "sheila", Australian slang for a woman. After the famous Australian painter w:Charles Wheeler.
    • cheese and kisses - "missus", wife
    • china plate - "mate", friend, compatriot
    • 'comic cuts or comics - the "guts"; no longer in common use.
    • Dad n Dave - shave. From the famous comic characters created by Steele Rudd.
    • Dapto dog - a "wog", an Australian of Mediterranean or eastern European descent.
    • Darby and Joan - "all alone"
    • dead horse or race horse – "tomato sauce"
    • dig in the grave – shave
    • dog and bone - "telephone".
    • dog's eye - a "pie", as in "I'll 'ave a dog's eye 'n' dead 'orse."
    • dog's eye with dead horse - a meat pie with tomato sauce
    • dropkick (and punt) – a stupid person, (originally a despicable person, a "****"). Referring to two types of kick used in various codes of football.
    • Eau-de-Cologne - "phone" - after a deoderant that was popular in the 60s and 70s, often shortened to 'oadie'.
    • Edgar Britt - a "****", after the name of a famous Australian jockey.
    • Fiddly-did - "quid" - after a one pound note. Not used since decimal currency introduced in 1966
    • frog and toad - "road", usually in the phrase "hit the frog 'n 'toad" (that is depart)
    • Gary Ablett - "tablet" - after the dead 17yo girl who ended up in Gary Ablett's bed.
    • ginger (ale) - "tail", as in "Get off me ginger!" (stop following me), or "a swift kick up the ginger".
    • gingerbeer – "engineer"
    • goanna - a "piano" (pianner).
    • good cheer - "beer"
    • Gregory Peck - "a Cheque"
    • half-back flanker - "****er", a position in Australian rules football
    • hammer (and tack) - "back"
    • Harold Holt or Harry Holt - salt (no longer commonly used but is still understood by most Australians); to disappear, to bolt, to depart quickly (as in to do a/the Harold (Holt)); referring to the Australian Prime Minister Harold Holt who disappeared while swimming at a beach in 1967
    • hi diddle diddle - "middle", particularly in Australian rules football
    • horse's hoof - a "****", a homosexual
    • hugs 'n' kisses - "missus"
    • Jack - to "jack" someone, to take the last of everything, over everyone. To "jack" someone is not a nice or considerate thing to do, "jacks" take great pleasure is "jacking".
    • jack - VD, from "Jack (and the box)", for "pox".
    • Jack the dancercancer, "the big 'C'"
    • James Hird - "turd"
    • Jimmy Britts - the "****s", either diarrhoea or annoyance.
    • Joe Blake - a "snake"
    • Johnny Raper - "paper", a newspaper, from the Australian rugby league footballer Johnny Raper.
    • Knees - "please"
    • Kyber Pass - "arse". often abbrev. such as "he needs a damn good kick up the Khyber"
    • Les Kiss - "****", from former 1980s Australian rugby league international Les Kiss, as in "I'm going for a Les Kiss."
    • loaf of bread - "head"
    • meat pie - a "try", a score in Rugby football
    • Morton Bay fig - a "wig"
    • Noah's (Ark) - a "shark"
    • Onkaparinga - "finger", after place in South Australia and blanket manufacturer
    • optic, optic nerve - a "perve", leering look, as in "Eh, china, have an optic at that sheila!"
    • Oxford scholar - a "dollar"
    • Pat (Malone) - "on one's own", as in "left him on his Pat Malone".
    • polly waffle - brothel. From the proprietary name of a chocolate bar.
    • pork pie, porky pie or porkies - "lie", typically a white lie, as in "When I looked into it I realised the whole story was a porky pie". Originally British.
    • red hots - the "trots", that is, trotting horse races or Diarrhea.
    • Reg Grundy's - "undies", underpants, from Reg Grundy, well known Australian television producer, sometimes also "Reginalds".
    • rock and roll - the "dole", unemployment benefits, social security payments, as in "He won't work in an iron lung as long as he can get on the rock 'n' roll."
    • Ronny Coote - having a "root".
    • rubbity or rubbity-dub - a "pub"
    • sausage roll – "goal", as in scoring point(s) for the team.
    • scotch tape - to "rape", generally used in shortened form "scotch"
    • septic (or seppo) – "American", short for septic tank, which rhymes with Yank.
    • sky rocket – "pocket"
    • snake's – "****", from snake's hiss, as in "I'm busting for a snake's."
    • steak and kidney - "Sydney".
    • Spanish Dancer - Cancer.
    • sway and swerve - perv (see above)
    • swing and a miss - "****", from American baseball terminology, as in "Time for a swing and a miss."
    • tea leaf - "thief".
    • Tin Tank - "Bank".
    • trouble and strife – "wife", as in "I can't come out I gotta stay home with the trouble and strife."
    • Wallaby Ted - 'rooted' (Roo-Ted), tired from strenuous activity
    • Wally Grout - "shout", to buy a round of drinks, from the Australian cricketer by that name, as in "It’s your Wally". Depending on context, it could also mean "stout" or "snout".
    • Warwick Farm - "arm", from the racecourse in Sydney, Australia, as in "He grabbed her by the Warwick Farms".
    • Westpac banker - "****er"
    • Uncle Merv - to "perv"

  11. #11
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    Nov 2004
    Chickens.
    4,989

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