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Then you must learn the main money values: £20 is a score, £25 is a pony, £100 is a ton, £500 is a monkey, and £1000 is a grand. Here is the complete list of cockney money slang.
Cockney slang for money isn’t always easy to remember. Is a Pony £25 or £50? What’s a Bullseye? Is a Monkey £200 or £500?
Find out all about Dough in Cockney Rhyming Slang - the world's biggest Cockney slang dictionary.
The world's biggest dictionary of cockney rhyming slang rated by real Londoners, cockney money, cockney translator and much more! Since 1999.
Cockney money slang. Evidence of a much wider variety of cockney slang for money is reaching us. For example David Campbell writes: “In the 50’s, we had a lodger who came from the East End, and was very well versed in things cockney.
Find out all about Wad in Cockney Rhyming Slang - the world's biggest Cockney slang dictionary.
Kite: originally meant a worthless bill or cheque. Hence you would say “I am going to fly a kite” means you are going to pass a bad cheque. The word seems to now mean any cheque (bad or not). It is still used in the insurance and banking industry I am told.
List of cockney rhyming slang for parts of the body arms, legs, feet, eyes, hands and more from the Cockney Rhyming Slang Dictionary.
Loo – the classic British way to say “toilet”. Shitter – self-explanatory! Bog – another classic British way to say “toilet”. Especially when the toilets are a bit filthy. We also use bogroll to mean toilet paper.
Classic ads featuring cockneys and cockney rhyming slang including Matteson’s Fridge Raiders, Lorraine Chase and more.