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Bye Definition

cravat: noise made by frogs in the grounds of a public school
Pepyshow: Odd entertainment in which scantily clad young ladies show men their diaries for money

The Meaning of Liff
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Oh, love it! My family have various words that exist nowhere except within our family - we sometimes have to remember that people don't know what we're talking about....
Mel Smith & Griff Rhys-Jones did a sketch about this sort of thing many years ago, in which they used place names that have other meanings. My favourite was;
Fremantle - which is what you do when you take all those little sachets of soap, bubble bath, condiments from hotels... they are not being stolen, as such, but 'fremantled...'
Tee hee - Alas Smith and Jones! Brings back a few memories!
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I think it might actually have been on Not The Nine O'clock News - even longer ago!




pillow: the mood engendered by finding that the aspirin have all gone and someone's put the empty packaging back in the bathroom cabinet
matchless: as for 'pillow' except applying to those evil people who put dead matches back in the box

I tend to have that effect on people, GL.


You have my sympathy, GL. I would recommend a sub-machine gun.

PS a definition I remember hearing once was Shoeburyness - the feeling you get when you sit down on a bus seat that was recently vacated.


This is really fascinating for me."
Delighted I've finally become trans-continental! ;-)

No, most of them do work. I was quite surprised that some don't.
I had to have Dave read them to me to have them sound right.

I may just do a lesson plan with this...

I may just do a lesson plan with this..."
There's a brilliant article from the Economist that would also work well. It covers common UK English phrases and what they really mean. I'll see if I can find the link for you, it's very funny.

http://www.economist.com/blogs/johnso..."
Really like this! Oh, I could add to it.... I can feel a blog coming on...! Thanks for that, I've just tweeted it
Nork: Mythical creature with tremendous powers of observation, as in "she watched him like a nork"
Lariat: Hat worn by Lawrence