Street slang for pu...
 

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[Closed] Street slang for punching is....

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 hora
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'Touched'.

Overhears this in the rough gym sauna. 'He came at me so I touched him. He got back up so i touched him again'. Hopefully not in his special place.

Apparently tgis is a known (manc?) Or street term.

Tried not to show my mirth.


 
Posted : 22/11/2014 7:43 pm
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Unless it's a tactic for confusing an attacker. Guy throws a punch, so matey grabbed his cock.

I imagine that would make the whole thing awkward enough to defuse the situation.


 
Posted : 22/11/2014 7:46 pm
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Well it worked when that guy on the tube (subway?) pulled down a sex pests pants.


 
Posted : 22/11/2014 7:50 pm
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If works anything to go by every other sentance includes "ebola" or "banta".


 
Posted : 22/11/2014 7:54 pm
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#Bantz


 
Posted : 22/11/2014 8:01 pm
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Could be worse. In castleford they call fighting "fisting". A mate worked there for a bit and was shocked when one of the women in the office on a monday morning was moaning about the local police, who arrested her son for fisting with his brother. "you know what young lads are like, they have a few beers and all end up fisting!".


 
Posted : 22/11/2014 8:55 pm
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Tapped as well. As in a fight I witnessed in West Didsbury (it can get surprisingly tasty in West Didsbury) where I overhead the protagonist say "I tapped him on the chin".

No you didn't, you absolutely leathered him one you f45k1ng nut!

Also like Clumped, from the old days..


 
Posted : 22/11/2014 8:58 pm
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Big fan of ker-****ted, myself.


 
Posted : 22/11/2014 9:00 pm
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"you know what young lads are like, they have a few beers and all end up fisting!".

That made me spit out my soup 😀


 
Posted : 22/11/2014 9:01 pm
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In Scotland you've been skelped


 
Posted : 22/11/2014 9:06 pm
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"Banjo'd" or "Dug him a ditch" (Stockport).


 
Posted : 22/11/2014 9:07 pm
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Now I come to think of it, donkeys years ago I got into an altercation with a bloke in London (of the Air Jordan, puffer jacket and sideways cap vintage) who threatened to "Touch me up, quick fist!"

It didn't come to anything, but I can't help wondering whether or not I completely misinterpreted what he was trying to say.

Perhaps I should have been flattered.. 😉


 
Posted : 22/11/2014 9:22 pm
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rough gym sauna

😯


 
Posted : 22/11/2014 9:24 pm
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How about "clout" for punch- which I've also heard as slang for a ladies special area.

"Pagger" for fight, Cumbrian again, but seems more towards Carlisle than oot west- think it's called a "frisk" for Whitehaven/Workington.


 
Posted : 22/11/2014 9:31 pm
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"Pagger" for fight, Cumbrian again,

I believe that a pagger/pagga must have at least three people involved.


 
Posted : 22/11/2014 9:40 pm
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No mention in the [url=www.gonmad.co.uk/cumbria/#P]dictionary?[/url]


 
Posted : 22/11/2014 9:44 pm
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I might be wrong. I would offer you a fight to resolve the issue, but there's only one of you.


 
Posted : 22/11/2014 9:45 pm
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As long as it's not a fisting....


 
Posted : 22/11/2014 9:48 pm
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Pagga in my book is mob based - seen a fair amount at the football in the 80's. Usually involves more grabbing and pushing than punching.

But also, I give my daughters pagga nowadays now - which is play fighting / wrestling descending into 'piling on' with tickling and trying to pull my leg hairs.


 
Posted : 22/11/2014 9:52 pm
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As long as it's not a fisting....

*Slang anecdote*

A very attractive, blonde female American friend of mine was in the White Horse (Sloany Pony) some years ago, and while she already had a drink in hand was given another. Now, us British types might say, "Oh, no! I'm double parked". She, however, used the American vernacular, just as there was a quiet moment in the pub;

"OH MY GOD! I'M DOUBLE FISTING!"

There was much mirth at her expense.


 
Posted : 22/11/2014 9:52 pm
 chip
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"Licks"


 
Posted : 22/11/2014 9:55 pm
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I was once walking through Burnley minding my own business, when a gang of lads proclaimed, "bump him" before proceeding to attempt to kick my head in.


 
Posted : 22/11/2014 11:58 pm
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(they didn't succeed, not because of my fighting prowess but because I possess a Rincewindesque talent for running away.)


 
Posted : 22/11/2014 11:59 pm
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If he touched him and he came back at him he clearly didn't touch him in a manly way.


 
Posted : 23/11/2014 12:03 am
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'Paggered' in Cumbria (Carlisle) means knackered, as in "give us a l'aal rest, A's paggered oot"
So paggering is more like beating up.
Clatter or clout is better for a punch - though we gentlemen of Cumberland don't go in for such things.


 
Posted : 23/11/2014 12:20 am
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Too busy with your sausages I expect.


 
Posted : 23/11/2014 12:25 am
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Dig.

As in - "he got a proper (genuine) dig in the chops".

Proper and dig enunciated in best West Country invective.


 
Posted : 23/11/2014 12:44 am
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"Banjo'd"

That sounds like an entirely new, very precise and rather excruciatingly painful slicing of a very sensitive area.


 
Posted : 23/11/2014 12:50 am
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'Lomped'* Or 'Lamped' (if yam posh ayet?)

e.g.

'Amyow lookin' urruss or wha'? 'Yow berra ****off afore yow gerra lompin''

Or

(pointing at back eye)!: 'Owjow get thet ?'

'I got lomped In the faerce ferplayinmegob dayoi?'

*SW Black Country.


 
Posted : 23/11/2014 2:13 am
 hora
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Ah yes I lick your bum bum down? (Originated from Jamaica/that UK song Informer)


 
Posted : 23/11/2014 4:09 am
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'banged' or 'sparked' here in liverpool


 
Posted : 23/11/2014 5:09 am
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Yep for banjo'd.

Lived in York for a while. 'Bray'd' seemed very popular. 'He bray'd him' got used a lot when the races were on!


 
Posted : 23/11/2014 5:11 am
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Not heard lamped in a while.

I worked in Carlisle for a while and a pagga/pagger was definitely a fight-
"How did you get a black eye?"
"Ah was in the gadgies knappa and sumyan started a pagga."

I love Cumbrian dialect!


 
Posted : 23/11/2014 8:20 am
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A very thoughtful chap offered to "weigh me in" once. I think he wanted to find out how much bigger than him I was before deciding to fight me.


 
Posted : 23/11/2014 8:39 am
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"Weighing in" or "Getting weighed in" round here means to get paid. I believe it originates from the process of the scrap metal collectors taking their wares to the smelters in exchange for cash based on the weight of their consignments.


 
Posted : 23/11/2014 10:20 am
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The English Language eh, taken to the cleaners then, any ideas on that one?


 
Posted : 23/11/2014 10:29 am
 chip
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Gave him a Luda is an expression my dad uses.
But from my child hood aswell as lick, licks there was tump, tumps or tumping.

To lamp some one also but lamping meant to relax, doing nothing.


 
Posted : 23/11/2014 10:35 am
 chip
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Give someone or I got a pasting, that's one of my dads also.


 
Posted : 23/11/2014 10:38 am
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Give someone some fist.

Lick him.

Spark him.

Bang him (out)

My favourite from my teen son was to declare that someone had received a particularly effective first punch knock-out... He one-bombed him.

Leathered and paggered here in West Yorks are interchangeable. It simply means to beat, no number or crowd-specific restrictions.


 
Posted : 23/11/2014 10:54 am
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Malvern Rider - Member

'Lomped'* Or 'Lamped' (if yam posh ayet?)

[url= https://www.google.co.uk/maps/ @52.4718685,-2.1011833,3a,15y,254.02h,91.09t/data=!3m4!1e1!3m2!1sUMCTAEnFK1jM4y8TpeWNtA!2e0]wim posh up the bonk![/url]

(proudly on show these last 2-3 years)


 
Posted : 23/11/2014 11:25 am
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Jesus, you losers

... it's "fist pie"

everywhere

(but "I'll ****ing bray you" used to be a teesside favourite, too)


 
Posted : 23/11/2014 11:53 am
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'Pun im in the swede'
(lamping is taking a leg each and then dragging said legs either side of a lamp post at high velocity until the said victim's nether regions prevent any further progress).


 
Posted : 23/11/2014 2:39 pm
 chip
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... it's "fist pie"

Knuckle sandwich 😀


 
Posted : 23/11/2014 3:21 pm
 chip
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Ooh ooh, a bunch of fives.


 
Posted : 23/11/2014 3:22 pm
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It's [url= http://singletrackmag.com/forum/topic/0119-numbers ]fish pie[/url].


 
Posted : 23/11/2014 3:24 pm
 chip
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Posted : 23/11/2014 5:28 pm

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