beak off

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English

Etymology

  • (complain; boast; yammer): Using beak as slang for a person's mouth.

Verb

beak off (third-person singular simple present beaks off, present participle beaking off, simple past and past participle beaked off) (slang)

  1. To complain.
    • 2005, Adrian Michael Kelly, Down Sterling Road, page 87:
      Stop beaking off at everyone all the —
      The first pitch blows right by.
    • 2016, Jean Oram, Tequila and Candy Drops:
      She'd been an absolute bear all day yesterday--to the point where Devon had shoved her off her zip-line platform when she'd started beaking off at him for not pointing out the moose he'd seen in the first section.
    • 2018, Fran Kimmel, No Good Asking:
      His dad told him to quit beaking off. We're doing this for your mom, okay. It's Christmas.
  2. To boast.
    • 1997, Ronald Mark Chambers, Three Really Nasty Plays, page 172:
      All you do is sit around, scratch your balls, rub your lucky tummy and beak off about how much money you're making!
    • 2009, Stephen Schneider, Iced: The Story of Organized Crime in Canada, page 178:
      During a ballyhooed interview with the Toronto Daily Star, Rocco beaked off that he sometimes sold as many as one thousand cases of whiskey a day.
    • 2011, John Conrad, Scarce Heard Amid the Guns: An Inside Look at Canadian Peacekeeping, page 156:
      When I got to them they said there was a couple of drunk Cambodian soldiers along the outside of the wire firing into the air. When I looked around the corner, I could see them drinking and beaking off [boasting].
    • 2019, A. F. Henley, The Chase and the Catch:
      Beaking off about how you'd never get John to crack... what the fuck does he know, right?
  3. To yammer; to blab.
    • 2019, R.W. Laidlaw, Oasis, page 234:
      No one seemed to care that a lowly trooper was beaking off during an officers' meeting: in fact, clearly everyone had been listening to him, not the other way around.
    • 2019, A.F. Henley, Road Trip:
      Nobody should have known it was there, but someone obviously did. Frank or Mitch probably beaked off to the wrong person and they came sniffing around.
    • 2021, Susan Hayes, Mating Fever:
      The cook had used too much of his own product and started beaking off to the wrong people.
  4. To be truant; to skip school.
    • 1996, John Sugden, Boxing and Society: An International Analysis, page 102:
      Most attend school reluctantly and some 'beak off' (play truant) regularly.
    • 1998, Robert McLiam Wilson, Ripley Bogle, page 49:
      I beaked off school on the afternoon of one of the most important Orange marches of the year.
    • 2013, Neil Mackay, All the Little Guns Went Bang, Bang, Bang:
      Roger the Dodger is always pulling a swifty and beaking off school – covering his face in his mammy's compact powder to make himself look all ill and deathly pale; using her lippy to put red dots on himself like he's got the measles.

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