Getting Off at Gateshead: The Stories Behind the Dirtiest Words and Phrases in the English Language

Getting Off at Gateshead: The Stories Behind the Dirtiest Words and Phrases in the English Language

by JonathonGreen (Author)

Synopsis

Where might it be advisable to bend your steps if you experienced an urgent need to bury a quaker? What would be your state of mind - or rather the state of your body - if someone described you as after your greens? How often does the average woman enjoy the pleasure of a visit from the cardinal? Under what circumstances would it be advisable to get out at Liverpool Edge Hill, rather than continuing all the way to Liverpool Lime Street? What is the exact nature of the complaint known as 'Irish toothache', and why is a hot poultice - or, failing that, a consultation with the eminent physician Dr Jerkoff - generally considered to be the only reliable cure? How old is the 'F' word and where does it come from? And has it always been verboten in polite society? Getting Off at Gateshead provides the answers to these, and to hundreds of other intriguing questions about words and phrases that are generally best avoided in job interviews, vicarage tea-parties, or when meeting your mother-in-law. The UK's leading slang expert Jonathon Green here provides the unexpurgated low-down on the downest and dirtiest expressions in the English language, some of them current, some of them obsolete - all of them utterly filthy, relating as they do to every conceivable human bodily function, whether sexual, masturbatory, menstrual, defecatory or emetic. Getting out at Gateshead not only tells the intriguing but little-known stories behind some familiar profanities - from the 'F' word to the 'C' word - it also offers a cornu-copia of less familiar terms that readers will be itching to regale their friends with. A richly entertaining exploration of the endlessly inventive world of English slang, Getting Off at Gateshead is a must for every word buff's 2008 Christmas stocking.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 336
Publisher: Quercus
Published: 02 Oct 2008

ISBN 10: 1847246087
ISBN 13: 9781847246080

Media Reviews
a respected scatolexicographer wit and invention - Daily Telegraph. Dictionary author Green loves the language in all its glory and makes this a fascinating, entertaining and very amusing read - Manchester Evening News. indispensable - Guardian. Green tells you how to be thoroughly disgusting this Christmas while remaining grammatically correct just the kind of thing for your grandad's stocking - Scotsman.
Author Bio
Jonathon Green is Britain's most distinguished slang lexicographer. The author of the much-praised Cassell's Dictionary of Slang (1998; 2nd edition 2005), he is the successor to the great Eric Partridge as the pre-eminent codifier of English slang. He is currently engaged in an ambitious enterprise to create the world's largest database of English slang words and phrases.