| 22. | knacker | ||
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Multifarious word with a plethora of uses. Can mean
A) very tired (of a person, usually in past tense), B) broken or injured (of a thing or body part, usually in past tense), C) testicle, singular (knackers plural), D) a person who kills and disposes old and worn out horses before they are buried and/or rendered into glue or possibly star in snuff animal porn movies specially made for Danish truckers in Milton Keynes. I'm knackered. I have knackered my knackers on the knacker's knockers.
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| 23. | Milton Keynes | ||
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The ghetto, aka MK My hoods ruff, my hoods tuff, i liv in da manor man dem call MK, blap blap
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| 24. | Capdown | ||
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capdown short for capitolist downfall. surprisingly anti-capitolist milton keynes ska core. fucking incredible. "wow, i saw capdown, i now have a creater meaning in my life"
"i love capdown" "fuck mcdonalds" |
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| 25. | Milton Keynes | ||
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The worlds 'new city' supposedly paving the way towards future city design with it's environmentally friendly image, a grid system of roads, modern architecture and facilitation of improved social interaction.
The reality being a city of overly sized proportions for it's population, never ending traffic confusion for outsiders, post-modern construction design in most buildings and a continuing growth of the Townie culture. |
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| 26. | grooming | ||
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The act of pedifiles coaxing children into sexual encounters via the internet. Earlier this year, Andrew Lay, a 35-year-old from Milton Keynes, was jailed for six years for committing sexual offences against a young girl he first contacted through a chatroom when she was just 12.
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| 27. | AFC Wimbledon | ||
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The story of AFC Wimbledon
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On May 28th 2002, an FA Commission granted permission for a group of businessmen to relocate Wimbledon FC Ltd to Milton Keynes, 70 miles from its history, home and community. Devastated fans mourned the death of their club, but before long they took a fresh approach by creating their own team. Backed by the Wimbledon Independent Supporters Association and The Dons Trust, with a combined membership approaching 3000, AFC Wimbledon was born. Just six weeks later, having obtained a ground, senior status, sponsorship and many hundreds of season ticket applications, AFC Wimbledon played its first game on Wednesday 10th July against Sutton united at Gander Green Lane (a game that saw a 4-0 defeat celebrated like a Cup Final win). Except that for the fans this isn't the club's first ever game – it is a direct continuation of the old club that was formed as Wimbledon Old Centrals back in 1889. This view is backed by the ex-Wimbledon manager Terry Burton, sacked by Chairman Charles Koppel less than a week after the season ended, despite achieving a creditable league finish. "If that's where the fans are, that is where the club is", said Burton, "It's a great idea. It's great for football. It's a great achievement and everyone involved should be proud of AFC Wimbledon. I love to watch football. I loved Wimbledon, but this AFC |
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| 28. | Bletchley Park | ||
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Bletchley Park is now a museum, the original buildings originally a secret government site built on the grounds of a stately home near the town of Milton Keynes in Buckinghamshire, England, about 50 miles north of London. It is situated in the town of Bletchley.
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During World War II, Bletchley Park was the site of the United Kingdom's efforts to break Axis ciphers, particularly the Enigma and Lorenz ciphers used by Nazi Germany. The estate was conveniently located midway between the universities of Oxford and Cambridge, which supplied many of the codebreakers. Bletchley Park has been attributed with reducing the war by 2 years, ending the bombing of Pearl Harbour by sending information of the location of Yamamoto the head of the Japanese North Atlantic Fleet. Montgomery would often talk of how the code breaking efforts of Bletchley Park enabled him to 'know what the Jerry's are having for breakfast'. The Government Code and Cypher School (GC & CS), the intelligence bureau responsible for interception and decryption of foreign transmissions, moved into the Park in 1938. The radio station constructed in the park for its use was given the codename "Station X" — this term is often erroneously applied to the code-breaking efforts at Bletchley as a whole. Station X was soon moved south to Whaddon Hall, to prevent any attention being drawn to the Bletchley site. To further the disguise of bletchley park it was built to appear as a Hospital from above so to deter bombin... |
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