In the prison system, a "baby" is a term given to homosexuals who act out during their incarceration. Used in a sentence, "What's up with that dude?" "Man he's ababy, stay away from him" I just got a new bunkie, man I thought this dude was alright, turns out he's ab...
Also a prison sentence of ten years. (Thanks S Johnson) bread (bread and honey) - money. From cockney rhyming slang, bread and honey = money, and which gave rise to the secondary rhyming slang 'poppy', from poppy red = bread. Bread also has associations with money, which in a ...
This would be an incomplete sentence to an Aussie male, who would always ask, "How's your day going, mate?" Never just "Hello," but always "Hello, mate." (Well, maybe I should mention that in many American cultures, a man might greet another man with "How's it going, man?")...
If youbustsomeone, you’ve caught them doing something they shouldn’t be doing/saying/hiding. “The policebustpeople every day” translates to “they catch all the bad guys and charge them or put them in prison.” “My brother gotbustedfor cheating on his exams.” Bustedalso means the s...
time Definitions include: time in prison. bust out Definitions include: to yell at someone; "blow up". drunk tank Definitions include: a holding cell for drunk people, usually in a county jail. lifer Definitions include: a person with a life sentence in prison. stretch Definitions include: ...
a.1949N. AlgrenLittle Lester’ inEntrapment(2009) 93: Upstairs, on the topmost tier [...] hustlers over the hump for redemption. 1950Goldinet al.DAUL150/2: Over the hump. [...] 2. (P) Past midpoint of prison sentence; at the beginning of the second half of one’s prison term....
rapper Mase, who says of Combs: “There’s no guy slicker than this young fly nigga…Did Fed time, outta town pie-flipper.”Pie-flipperalludes to Combs’s short-lived drug-dealing when he was a student at Howard University, though he never servedFed time, or a federal prison sentence....
This term, generally reserved for in-person or locker room interactions, refers to an unsavory person who wanders or "mopes" around. A former police officer gives this sentence as an example: "I wish these mopes would quit milling around the square." 785 votes 10-4? 10 Dear Chi...
). Used at the end of a sentence, as in "...Jy weet mos." ("...You know then.")naartjie (Afrikaans)- tangerine, mandarin, satsuma - any pealable orange-coloured citrus fruit with neat segments; used as a mainstream word in South African English, and a dietary staple. Often ...
Même après des années en prison, l’escroc continue àfaire des siennes.(Even after years in prison, the con artist is still up to his old tricks.) 26.Bordel— Mess English has borrowed this word in the form of “bordello.” And yes, in Frenchbordelliterally means “brothel.” ...