August 18, 201015 yr Anyone heard the term chuffed? Meaning delighted. I was chuffed to bits! Really well known term in Britain. Chuff can also be used as part of the phrase 'take it up the chuff', which is very common in the West.
August 18, 201015 yr Chuff can also be used as part of the phrase 'take it up the chuff', which is very common in the West. Heard it sparingly but 'Take it up the duff' as in sexual relationship is more common.
June 5, 201115 yr No pulling any punches here, just give us grist for the mill. All right you chow hounds, what's the word on the street?:P
June 5, 201115 yr Haha. My boyfriend is from England. And I always bust out with British slang. He gets so irritated. Sometimes he laughs though... I'm pretty good at it.
June 6, 201115 yr So a drunk person in Mexico is called a pedo? Best not call any drunk that in any English speaking countries you visit. Is the slang for a store worker in Mexico 'whore' by any chance?! LMFAO just saw this.
June 6, 201115 yr Lesson; Not everybody here is american. What's stopping you from saying mexican slang? (Of course translating the meaning) How dynamic.
June 6, 201115 yr Do I even want to know what she really means? I'm thinking no . . . Anyways, there really is not much slang here. Except racial slurs, which I'm not going to say as I'm sure some people would take offense to them. Edit: recently it's been very popular to shorten words- so now awkward is "awk", definitely is "def", etc. Quite annoying actually. :shifty:
Create an account or sign in to comment