Cockney rhyming slang
Cockney rhyming slang is a form of English slang which originated in the East End of London. Many of its expressions have passed into common language, and the creation of new ones is no longer restricted to Cockneys. Australian English shares some Cockney rhyming slang and also has many of its own terms. (See: Australian words.) Some people have speculated that this is due to a strong formative influence of Cockneys on Australian culture.
Related Topics:
English - Slang - East End of London - Cockney - Australian English - Australian words - Australian culture
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In United States some common slang seems to have had its origin in Cockney rhyming slang: "raspberry," shortened from "raspberry tart" means fart; "dukes" means fists; "duke it out" means settle an argument via fisticuffs; "bread" means money; "creamed" means beaten.
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Rhyming slang developed as a way of obscuring the meaning of sentences to those who did not understand the slang, though it remains a matter of speculation whether this was a linguistic accident, or whether it was developed intentionally to assist criminals or to maintain a particular community.
Related Topics:
Slang - Linguistic - Criminal - Community
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Rhyming slang works by replacing the word to be obscured with the first word of a phrase that rhymes with that word. For instance, "face" would be replaced by "boat", because face rhymes with "boat race". Similarly "feet" becomes "plates" ("plates of meat"), and "money" is "bread" (a very common usage, from "bread and honey"). Sometimes the full phrase is used, for example "Currant Bun" to mean The Sun (often referring to the British Tabloid Newspaper of that name). There is no hard and fast rule for this, and you just have to know whether a particular expression is always shortened, never shortened, or can be used either way.
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Some substitutions have become relatively widespread in Britain, for example to "have a butcher's" means to have a look, from the rhyming slang "butcher's hook", and these are often now used without awareness of the original rhyming slang (so for example "berk" and "cobblers" — see links below — are both less taboo than their etymology would suggest). However, most actual and purported substitutions are still not in common usage.
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This style of rhyming has also spread through many English-speaking countries, where the original phrases are supplemented by rhymes created to fit local needs. Creation of rhyming slang has become a word game for people of many classes and regions. The term Cockney rhyming slang is generally applied to these expansions to indicate the rhyming style, though arguably the term only applies to phrases used in the East End of London.
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It is often used in films (such as Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels (1998), (which contains a glossary of Cockney rhyming slang on the United States DVD version to assist the viewer) and on television (e.g. Minder, EastEnders) to lend authenticity to an East End setting. The theme tune to The Italian Job, composed by Quincy Jones, contains many Cockney rhyming slang expressions. The lyrics by Don Black amused and fascinated the composer.
Related Topics:
Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels - 1998 - DVD - Minder - EastEnders - The Italian Job - Quincy Jones - Don Black
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Musical artists such as The Audiobullys and The Streets use the slang in almost all of their songs. The box office success Ocean's Eleven (2001) contains an incorrect example of Cockney rhyming slang, when the character Basher Tarr uses the slang "Barney" to mean "trouble," derived from "Barney Rubble." In fact (as most Londoners will tell you) "Barney" does not mean trouble but means an argument or a fight. Some argue that it is derived from "Barn Owl" which (in a Cockney accent) nearly rhymes with row (argument).
Related Topics:
The Audiobullys - The Streets - Ocean's Eleven - 2001 - Barney Rubble
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However, the book Understanding British English, by Margaret E. Moore, Citadel Press, 1995, does not list "Barney" in its Rhyming Slang section. Furthermore, an old book called Slang and Its Analogues, by J.S. Farmer and W.E. Henley, originally printed in 1890 and reprinted by Arno Press in 1970, states that "Barney" (which can mean anything from a "lark" to a "row") is of unknown origin, and was used in print as early as 1865.
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Some rhyming slang is rooted in the era of its origin and may be destined to be lost. In the 1980s, for example, "Kerry Packered" meant "knackered"; the current (2004) term "Britneys" to mean beers, or in Ireland to mean "queers" i.e. gay people, via the music artist "Britney Spears", may not outlast Britney's own career. There is a set of specialist rhyming slang terms used by some members of the British disabled community to describe medical conditions. This is sometimes termed "disability rhyming slang" and shares the same style, and some of the same phrases, as the more traditional Rhyming Slang.
Related Topics:
1980s - Kerry Packer - 2004 - Britney Spears
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