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- comparison rate - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library, In Australian finance, some sort of all up cost for loans. (probably a specific formula for consumer loans including mortgages required by regulation for consumer protection)
- composition shingle - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library
- call tabs
- Definition? Vox Sciurorum (talk) 16:29, 16 August 2020 (UTC)
- civic guard, Civic Guard, civil guard, Civil Guard, Garde Civique (from French, refers to a specific militia)
- seems to refer generally to a citizen militia. So civic guard should be considered a non-specific English term.
- confusor in the field of mechanics and fluidics (may be used in conjunction with a diffuser). I was hoping for a clear definition here, because frankly, it confused me.
- crank issue
- Definition? Vox Sciurorum (talk) 16:46, 16 August 2020 (UTC)
- cross over Jordan
- cozzes (UK): A term used in Great Britain in order to describe or talk about police officers.
- That's just a diminutive of cozzer. The entry would go at cozzie under an different etymology. Dbfirs 08:37, 9 November 2018 (UTC)
- Cozzes must be a plural of coz or cozz, not cozzie. Equinox ◑ 21:24, 30 April 2021 (UTC)
- dub down - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library
- dB suffixes: some or all of them? (dBm is now defined, but not dBA)
- do-do nutters or The do-dos (US): Arises from the stereotype of police officers eating donuts.
- Dee-Dar - someone from Sheffield (refers to the original Sheffield pronunciation of "thee" and "tha". Often used by people from Barnsley)
- dragged through a knothole (or keyhole, or forty knotholes, sometimes + backwards, and sometimes with pulled for dragged): very stressed or very dishevelled
- do a dime
- do the town
- drop over
- duke's mixture
- dime-bar or dimebar – "Whether you call them dime-bars, energy vampires, lunch-outs, or whatever, it is undeniable that personal problems can often seriously hinder the effectiveness of a campaign." ("A Critique of Newbury," Do or Die 6 ); see also ,
- dod-rot, dod-rotted – Philip Foner's introduction to We, the Other People: Alternative Declarations of Independence by Labor Groups, Farmers, Woman’s Rights Advocates, Socialists, and Blacks, 1829–1975 (University of Illinois Press, 1976), p. 27, quotes a tract published in the Coast Seamen's Journal in 1894 that exhorts the reader to "comport yourself generally like a dod-rotted lunatic." See Merriam-Webster, Green's Dictionary of Slang.
- duke - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library (Northern?) Irish slang. cf. Duke, 'Look. "Give us a duke at yer paper."' This meaning is not included in duke#Verb.
E
- flying kilometer - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library - Average speed measured over a distance of exactly one kilometer, where all intentional acceleration is performed before entering the measured mile, and all slowing is performed after leaving the measured area.
- flying mile - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library - Average speed measured over a distance of exactly one mile, where all intentional acceleration is performed before entering the measured mile, and all slowing is performed after leaving the measured area.
- foundation scholar - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library
- full-stop landing - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library
- firm code - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library / firmcode - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library / firm-code - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library - contrast hard code and soft code. Keith the Koala (talk) 15:04, 3 July 2014 (UTC)
- field quantity - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library - is etymology from the same field as "electric field"? Or is it more like "a measurement in the field"?
- fragmentary hypothesis - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library, see Fragmentary hypothesis; one of three theories about the origin of religious texts. PseudoSkull (talk) 02:36, 23 March 2018 (UTC)
- faze out (transitive, i.e. faze somebody out)
- fifth business
- firm market
- freeze on
- fax democracy - SOP or not? Azertus (talk) 00:17, 18 September 2018 (UTC)
- fly by the nets - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library or fly by the nets of - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library – Elliot Murphy, Unmaking Merlin: Anarchist Tendencies in English Literature (Zero, 2014), p. 114: "By undermining certain 'big words,' Joyce – like the anarchists Orwell and Chomsky – correspondingly flies by the ideological nets of church and state." (though uses that having to do with the coiner James Joyce also seem commonplace enough)
G
H
J
- Jack, someone from Swansea
K
- Lingnan - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library
- lotheth - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library
- Liouville's theorem: many senses at Wikipedia: Liouville's theorem
- lofi hip hop - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library
- Lower Paleolithic - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library PseudoSkull (talk) 03:54, 28 March 2018 (UTC)
- linguisticism - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library
- lazies : Term used for police, but more often used for off-duty police officers.
- Lobbygobbler, Leyther, someone from Leigh :
- lay a trip
- lay the lumber
- lean times
- lesser lights
- like a dirty shirt
- like dog's breath
- like the devil
- line of authority
- little off
- live by
- living soul (any person)
- local yokel
- lunch-out – "Whether you call them dime-bars, energy vampires, lunch-outs, or whatever, it is undeniable that personal problems can often seriously hinder the effectiveness of a campaign." ("A Critique of Newbury," Do or Die 6 )
- lam - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library, lamm - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library - part of (some) looms (one of these is an alternative spelling of the other)
- lien* in skateboarding, as in "lien air" or "lien-to-tail" (seen at madonna); apparently from Neil backwards, after Neil Blender
- m-factor - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library: "movement, migration, mobility," especiaćlly understood as a phenomenon contributing to or defining the American national character (introduced by George W. Pierson in 1962 and used in historical scholarship as recently as 2012)
- male duct system - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library - accessory reproductive organs that produce, mature, store, and transport sperm from the testes to the exterior
- mens et del - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library This appears on many maps and plans and is in all cases followed by a date: eg. mens et del 1884.
- Probably Latin rather than English, first part derived from mensuro (“measure”). Vox Sciurorum (talk) 16:50, 1 August 2020 (UTC)
- "mensuravit et delineavit"; see Wiktionary:Tea_room/2022/January#English/New_Latin_"mens._et_del."
- midpoint valuation - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library
- Mac, someone from Scotland
- medullomyoblastoma, "a variant of medulloblastoma with an aggressive course..." (from here).
- meningocele manque - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library
- Member or member (Canada): Used by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police to refer to fellow Mounties in place of the usual "officer" or "constable" (or equivalent) in other police forces.
- Merry-Jack, Mera-Jack - someone from Camborne (Cornwall)
- Mickey Mouse, someone from Liverpool :
- make every effort
- match wits
- meet one's half way = meet halfway?
- mind bottling
- morasteen great stone in English per s:Surrey Archaeological Collections/Volume 1/The Kingston Morasteen
- magico-Marxism
- moderate#Verb - allow a post through to a mailing list; exercise the powers of a list moderator. See https://packages.debian.org/buster/listadmin for example. Also moderator, moderation, though these two can also refer to https://en.wikipedia.orghttps://dictious.com/en/Internet_forum#Moderators which is a bit different. -- The verb can also refer to such forums. Equinox ◑ 08:11, 20 September 2020 (UTC)
- panning, abbreviation of panhandling – "Underwood documents in detail the routines of 'panning' (panhandling) and 'canning' (collecting cans), often pursued as methodically (with specific hours, techniques, and turf) as more legitimate work" – Susan Fraiman, Extreme Domesticity: A View from the Margins (Columbia University Press, 2017), p. 182.
- prickle bush --Geographyinitiative (talk) 10:39, 10 December 2019 (UTC)
- Apparently any of several many species of shrubs growing in dry places in Australia.. I grew up in America hearing pricker bush for barberry. Vox Sciurorum (talk) 17:53, 1 August 2020 (UTC)
- Proto-Oghuz, a protolanguage without a Wiktionary category or Wikipedia article, listed under Category:Old Anatolian Turkish language. PseudoSkull (talk) 02:02, 13 August 2019 (UTC)
- pixieing - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library – engaging in small-scale covert acts of ecotage (not sure whether the main entry should be at pixie as I can't find any uses of the infinitive)
- paramesangium - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library - we have "paramesangial"
- parson-naturalist - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library
- pulse voltammetry - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library
- Phæacian - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library
- Poë-bird - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library, ¿¿¿Prosthemadera cincinnata??? or Prosthemadera novaeseelandiae (See tui and parson bird.)
- præcaval - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library praecaval
- Prætexta - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library Praetexta
- Prætorium - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library Praetorium
- pandey - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library
- perihadion - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library periapsis around Pluto. Has been used but may not meet CFI yet.
- public general - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library?
- proto-Christian - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library
- planetary phase
- paint a picture -- figurative sense? SoP?
- Pandu Hawaldar (India): Indian constabulary (and not officers) were recruited mostly from village areas. Pandu Ram was a common name in the villages.
- pay the shot
- Penelopes (US): (slang) the police; coined by the SF Bay Area rap artist E-40.
- Purrer, someone from Wigan, a "pie-eater"
- pimple pole
- pinch an inch
- pinch to grow an inch
- pine float
- Plastics or plastics (Australia): Colloquial term used by Australian state police to refer to the Australian Federal Police.
- Started Citations:plastics. Not sure if this should be plural/collective only, or at plastic with (chiefly in the plural). It's hard to find quotations because search results are masked by references to plastic material, even in a police context.
- plump full
- power to burn
- pressed open seam a seam that has two seam allowances that are each pressed flat at its own side of the seam
- pro-situ - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library or pro-Situ - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library (roughly meaning influenced by or aligned with the Situationist International)
- protocol analyzer (Special:WhatLinksHere/protocol analyzer) - in networking / technology. I've heard this term was coined by Hewlett-Packard, see also sniffer (networking sense)
- pull level Synonym with draw level but with the nuance of requiring effort. Seems common in football "The hosts pulled level after goals from Smyth and Fisher"
- pull tab - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library
- purple hair See https://lwn.net/Articles/766699/#Comments (open-access on Oct. 11, 2018); a commenter says "I do not support your purple-hair version of Linux." which someone explains as "it's an obscure derogatory term with similar meaning to "SJW" or "feminist", occasionally used in such upstanding places as 4chan, referring to a stereotypical young woman with purple hair and a Tumblr account and socially liberal views." I could add it, but I'm having trouble finding usable cites
- pxs - prices
- Apparently Korean for "hamlet, village cluster", it is a unit of governance in the DPRK. Cnilep (talk) 02:54, 19 April 2018 (UTC)
- Geertz & Geertz call it a “term in Balinese” and use italics on first mention (p. 30). Is it attested as a loanword in English? There is no request page for Balinese, but I wonder if editors on Wiktionary:Requested entries (Indonesian) could help with the Balinese lemma? Cnilep (talk) 02:57, 31 January 2018 (UTC)
- SOP? Maybe in reference to "drawing the short one"? 2804:1B0:1900:9266:79CC:5FEB:7398:8022 12:49, 26 November 2023 (UTC)
- What does this mean? 2804:1B0:1900:9266:79CC:5FEB:7398:8022 12:49, 26 November 2023 (UTC)
- Smurfs (Greece/Poland): Used in Greece and Poland. Because of the blue colour of police officers is like smurfs.
- Snippers or snipper (US): An African-American term used mostly in North America.
- spathella - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library, spathelle, spathellule - botanical terms. BigDom 14:56, 20 June 2018 (UTC)
- spin crew
- spoogler (or Spoogler?) - the spouse of an IT worker (specifically Google? cf. Xoogler, Noogler)
- stand away
- start a fire under
- stash - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library To keep (a new romantic partner) secret from one's friends and family. — Paul G (talk) 18:31, 6 January 2018 (UTC)
- statute-barred - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library - another online dict defines it thus: adjective ENGLISH LAW (especially of a debt claim) no longer legally enforceable owing to a prescribed period of limitation having lapsed.
- Steely, Steel Boy, someone from Sheffield
- stick them up
- stink the joint out
- stop someone cold
- straight cash
- straw horse
- stretch the dollar
- strike up the band
- string a line
- suck eggs
- super mint
- Super Troopers or super trooper (US): Became a common name in Vermont for police in that state after the release of the movie Super Troopers.
- supplementary hypothesis - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library, see Supplementary hypothesis; one of three theories about the origin of religious texts. PseudoSkull (talk) 02:37, 23 March 2018 (UTC)
- Swansea Jack, someone from Swansea
- seek down - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library
- sweat and graft, graft and sweat. This is a straightforward application of the third definition of graft, but seeing that used to mean simple labor rather than corruption is unfamiliar to my eyes, and it seems like a special idiom. Question: is it specifically British?
- Yes, both the American sense of corruption and the British sense of hard work for both noun and verb seem to have appeared independently in the 1850s. The British sense is cited from 1853 in the OED. I've only recently heard the American sense here in the UK. Dbfirs 18:20, 5 July 2019 (UTC)
- While Partridge emphasizes flirting, attestations on the web seem like comments on masculinity and social class – a bit like a (US) douchebag or a twit. , Cnilep (talk) 04:19, 30 January 2018 (UTC)
- I can only find cites by one author (Alexander Macalister) - it seams to be some sort of sheath in the shoulder joint of an insect. Need cites by more authors. Kiwima (talk) 04:43, 4 December 2016 (UTC)
- Appears to be used enough to add, both in German and English, but I will need to read the papers to make sure they are all using it the same way. Archaic if not obsolete. One modern use appears to refer to a partially formed vagina. Vox Sciurorum (talk) 23:44, 2 August 2020 (UTC)
- shrammy - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library — I think it means cold
- Started Citations:shrammy, but it seems very unlikely to be more than a hapax due to mistranslation from German and a phonological shift specific to Japanese. Apparently means muddy.
- Smt. - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library — abbreviation for Shrimati or Shreemati, a term used to refer to a married women in various languages of India
- This is hard to search for because Shrimati is a name and smt is a technology. Got any references? Vox Sciurorum (talk) 23:36, 2 August 2020 (UTC)
- spit muffin - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library
- signal tower - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library - a railway thing - The same as an interlocking tower?
- substitution class - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library
- Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha - the proper name for the British overseas territory
- Saint Martin / Collectivity of Saint Martin - an overseas collectivity of France in the West Indies in the Caribbean.
similorer - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library - presumably, someone who works in similor; also plural, similorers. See s:Page:Showell's Dictionary of Birmingham.djvu/65: "Among the trades that have vanished altogether, are steelyard makers... saw-makers, ... tool-makers... and similorers, whatever they might have been." Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 20:19, 22 August 2019 (UTC) Even your quoted dictionary says "similorers - whatever they might have been"; so they don't know. We won't attest this to Wikt standards I'm sure. You have to be careful with dictionaries: see use-mention distinction. Equinox ◑ 20:28, 19 November 2023 (UTC)
- Usage here: ("Wright Adam, similorer, Constitution hill"); ("at Birmingham, makers of anvils 5; augers 1... screws 27 ; similorer 1; snuffers 40"; also in , a parliamentary publication); ("Simmons Thos. & Son, similorers of metals, 7 court, Lionel-st."); ("Dewsbery Fred. similorer & silverer"). Also, Dictionary of Birmingham is a misnomer; it's not a dictionary. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 20:46, 19 November 2023 (UTC)
- sinking spell in medicine (an episode of bad feeling?)
- six up and half a dozen down - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library
- staffage -- (an extended meaning--artists' props used in paintings?) "The second part of Inspired by the East is dominated by nineteenth-century orientalist paintings. There is a symbiotic relationship between the paintings and the exotic artefacts, as orientalist painters habitually made collections of Islamic armour, weapons, woodwork, fabrics, pots and hookahs and they arranged and rearranged those objects in painting after painting in a somewhat indiscriminate fashion, so that one might find Albanian, Persian or even Indian objects featuring in Cairo street scenes. The exhibition includes photographs of the studios of Jean-Leon Gerome and of Frederick Arthur Bridgman which show that those places were cluttered with this sort of useful and evocative staffage." Robert Irwin, "Enthralled by the light" (London: The Times Literary Supplement, October 25, 2019, p. 20).
T
U
- untouchables (Scotland): A term often used in Scotland for a mobile squad of uniformed Police, term originates from the 1960s US TV series.
- up with: opposite of down with?
- watershed mark
- wave the green flag to enthusiastically promote Ireland and its culture. Jingoistic nationalism.
- I think we'd be better off defining wave the flag generally. Vox Sciurorum (talk) 16:06, 4 August 2020 (UTC)
- Got flag-waving. Equinox ◑ 18:24, 7 August 2021 (UTC)
- white knight syndrome - OneLook - Google (Books • Groups • Scholar) - WP Library
- white knuckles - we have white-knuckle
- word is good
- worthy poor
- written in blood
- wolf-pad - ??? (a carved foot on furniture?) "The sculptural ornamentation, in the grotesque figures and wolf-pads on the sarcophagus, shows the new influence of the Low Countries, that was by now making rapid encroachments upon English Renaissance design." James Lees-Milne, Tudor Renaissance (London, B. T. Batsford Ltd, 1951, p. 36).
- I think it's just a carved foot, wolf + pad, but I'm not certain of that. Vox Sciurorum (talk) 14:56, 15 August 2020 (UTC)