Skip to main content
Someone who could sell ice to the eskimos
blagger by Gamberro December 25, 2003
Related Words

Blaggarding 

Being mischievous and causing trouble wherever you go accompanied with shady characters of many types.
Liam and Jess were blaggarding down the canal on a Friday night with numerous shady characters they call there friends.
Frequently used in Britain and some other English speaking countries, to mean:

1. Trickery to obtain something vital or dear to someone, especially information.

2. Thieving, stealing.

3. Getting something in a cheeky, harmless way.
1. Gordon had his personal information blagged, and before he knew it, his bank account was cleared out.

2. The scumbags blagged themselves everything from televisions to trainers during the riots. One guy even looted some Immodium, after an earlier break-in at Nandos.

3. Stephanie blagged herself a free drink by flashing some healthy cleavage to the barman, shaking her cute, tight arse as she walked away.
blagged by NaughtySteph September 10, 2011

blaggard 

From blackguard -- either concerning street urchins who would blacken clients' shoes, or from the house servants who worked in the dark quarters of the house: a person whose conduct or character is disgraceful, disgusting, morally unfit; a thief with evil intent; a contemptible scoundrel; a term of abuse; a foulmouthed person
I won't have that blaggard take one step in my quarters!
blaggard by William Thompson October 17, 2007

Blaggard 

A person of dubious morals, sometimes with villainous intent and suspicious plots.
More often than not in cahoots with other shady characters.
You are a fool and a blaggard!
Blaggard by 123lachlan July 1, 2006

Blaggard 

A villain, a rogue, an evil or "black-hearted" person, hence abreviated low brow U.K. style to "blaggard"
The blaggards marooned the crew, raped the women, and drowned the children.
Blaggard by ZydecoSteve August 7, 2005