🇬🇧
British & Irish slang
UK and Irish slang — Cockney, Scouse, Geordie, Yorkshire, Glaswegian, Brummie, Welsh, West Country, plus Irish English. Centuries of regional dialects feeding into modern British and Irish street talk.
4,294 terms · page 20 of 72
Most-viewed in this category
How to say them
All British & Irish slang
dokedoll's housedolly birddolly knotdolly shopdolly tubdollymopdolphin-friendlydon handdone and dusteddone thingdonkey jacketdonkey'sdonkey's yearsdonnishdoolally tapdoole
duːl
doorstepˈdɔː(ɹ)stɛp
doorsteppydoorstopdormouseˈdɔɹ.maʊs
dortdossdɒs
doss downdouble appointmentdouble beddouble creamdouble firstdouble picadouble sciencedouble small picadouble-jabbeddouceurdoughnuttingdown toolsdown-calverdown-sharedowndrinsdowngangdownlandˈdaʊn.lænd
Doxbridgedozzleddrabbetdralondraughtdɹɑːft
draughtsdɹɑːfts
drawcardDRCPdree one's weirddreichdriːx
drengˈdɹɛŋ
drengagedress shirtdressing-boydringdrink linkdrinking fountaindrinking man's degreedrinking-up timedrive a coach and horses throughRead more on this topic
AAVE and internet slang: where most of the words actually come from
Most of the slang you think TikTok invented came from somewhere older. A clear look at AAVE's role in modern internet language — without the dodging or the flattening.
9 min read
Where 'rizz' came from: the streamer, the year, the lineage
Most internet definitions for 'rizz' start with Kai Cenat. The longer story is more interesting — and goes back further than 2021.
7 min read
How 'slay' got from Beowulf to your group chat in eight steps
Most slang lifts a thousand-year-old word and gives it new clothes. 'Slay' is the textbook case.
6 min read