Cockney Rhyming Slang is prevalent in dialects of English from the East End of London. Cockney Rhyming Slang is said to have originated in the market place so vendors could communicate to each other without the customers knowing what they were saying. Others believe it originated in prisons so inmates could talk to each other without the guards knowing what they said.
The word "hamburger" did not originate in France. It is derived from the German city of Hamburg.
The etymology of the word "Cockney" is uncertain, but it is believed to have originated from the Middle English word "cokeney," which was a term used to refer to a spoiled or pampered child. Over time, it came to signify a person from a certain area of London known for its distinct accent and dialect.
The word pity has a short I (ih) sound, rhyming with city, gritty, and pretty.
The only word I can think of that sounds vaguely similar to "kutchka" is "kućka", which is country (not a lot of people from the city would use it, it sounds very old-fashioned) slang for a penis.
The slang term 'scouse house' refers to a genre of electronic dance music that emerged in the city of Liverpool, England. It is a fusion of house music, breakbeat, and techno, characterized by its fast tempo and repetitive rhythms. The term 'scouse' is derived from the nickname for people from Liverpool, known as scousers.
A Cockney is anybody that was/is born within the sound of the famous Bells of St Mary-le-Bow church in the City of London and not as most people think, the bells of Bow church in the east-end of London In general, the term is used to refer to working class Londoners from the East of the Capital. In 2000, London actually did a study to see how far away the bells of St. Mary-le-Bow could be heard: six miles to the east, five miles to the north, three miles to the south, and four miles to the east of the church. The Cockneys have their own secret language known only to the working class and lower class people of London (Cockney's) called Cockney rhyming slang. Here are some famous Cockneys you might have heard of: Michael Caine Charlie Chaplin, and Sid Vicious!
City Slang was created in 1991.
All words are rhyming words. city / pity
Ben was a greek meal muth like a hamburger ,without fries thank you "that will be £1.99 thankyou" It was cooked in a hot tub much loved by the poorpers in the city of kerplunk it is often refered to as nedock in rhyming slang
The Aztecs originate from central Mexico. Their main city (island) is now where Mexico City is.
Canberra is the capital city of Australia.. not a slang word.
The city of Seo
The earliest recorded use of "cockney" was in 1372. In a poem by William Langland, the word means a small, misshapen egg.By 1521, the term's meaning had changed, and country people used "cockney" to refer to an effeminate city man.The modern meaning of an East Ender born within the sound of the Bow Bells was coined in 1600. Samuel Rowlands referred to a "Bowe-Bell Cockney" in his satire, The Letting of Humours Blood in the Head-Vaine.
In New Zealand, "Palmy" is slang for Palmerston North, a North Island city.
· Young Harris is a city in Georgia
Detroit!!
Detroit