Dictionary of Slang Words: Vocabulary Building - Manik Joshi

Dictionary of Slang Words: Vocabulary Building

By Manik Joshi

  • Release Date: 2021-06-09
  • Genre: Education

Description

Slangs are very informal or specific words that are especially used by a particular group of people and more common in spoken English. In this book, you will study and learn various common slang words, cockney rhyming slangs, and internet slangs

Sample This:
01 -- aardvark [n.] -- (British Slang) hard work, unpleasant tasks
02 -- abbess [n.] -- (British Slang) a woman who runs a brothel
03 -- about done [adj.] -- (British Slang) completed or finished
04 -- about right [adj.] -- (British Slang) Slightly drunk
05 -- absotively (adv.) -- (American Slang) absolutely, positively
06 -- AC/DC [adj.] -- bisexual
07 -- acid [n.] -- LSD ((Lysergic acid diethylamide) an illegal drug that affects people’s minds and causes them to see and hear things that are not really there
08 -- action [n.] -- (American Slang) the state of feeling excited
09 -- antifreeze [n.] -- (American Slang) liquor
10 -- aries [n.] -- heroin, a drug that has strong side effects
11 -- ashes [n.] -- cannabis or marijuana
12 -- aunt Mary [n.] -- cannabis or marijuana
13 -- axe [n.] -- musical instrument, especially a guitar or saxophone
14 -- axeman [n.] -- a man who plays a musical instrument, especially a guitar or saxophone
15 -- axle grease [n.] -- (British Slang) a bribe || (American Slang) butter

SLANGS -- IDIOMS

01 -- a bit of all right (British Slang) -- a person that you think is very attractive in a physical way
02 -- a bit of rough (British Slang) -- a man from a low social class who has a physical relationship with a woman of a higher social class
03 -- a cold day in hell -- the time of occurrence of an event that will never happen
04 -- a grape on the business (Australian Slang) -- a person whose presence spoils things for others

COCKNEY RHYMING SLANG
Rhyming slang works by taking a usual or common word and using a rhyming phrase of two or three words to replace it. The second or the last word in the rhyming phrase rhymes with the usual or common word. For instance, we can use the rhyming phrase ‘apples and pears’ in place of a common word ‘stairs’

Apples and Pears -- Stairs
You can say “Apples and pears are a key part of the home.” [instead of “Stairs are a key part of the home.”]
Note: Sometimes, the last word is dropped in common speech. So, you can also say, “Apples are a key part of the home.” (We dropped “and pears” from the above sentence.)

Cockney Rhyming slang Cockney is a dialect of the English language. Cockney Rhyming slang is believed to have originated in the mid-19th century in the East End of London. Traditionally, a cockney is someone who lives in the East End of London.

INTERNET SLANGS [Most Internet slangs are a short form of phrases but often they cannot be pronounced,]
121 -- One to One
2day -- Today
2moro -- Tomorrow
2nite -- Tonight
4EAE -- For Ever and Ever

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