by uk girl August 30, 2006
by randytaylor69 May 26, 2023
A slightly less offensive variant on "wank-piece", indicative of an individual (usually male) who displays foolish or pompous behaviour, usually in the work place.
Largely used in Glasgow/ West of Scotland, from the 1980s onwards.
Largely used in Glasgow/ West of Scotland, from the 1980s onwards.
by Elmer Gee February 01, 2023
by Rosywiththehosy March 20, 2018
by Sidney Shaw December 09, 2020
Similar to "hanging out of my arse" but usually referencing tireness and fatigue instead of a hangover or a sense of feeling ill.
by Louis Lovetrain May 03, 2023
Joseph Wright. The English dialect dictionary, London: Henry Frowde (1898-1905), s.v. arse-verse. (archive.org/embed/in.ernet.dli.2015.13022)
Available on-line at eddonline4-proj.uibk.ac.at
Available on-line at eddonline4-proj.uibk.ac.at
by BoarGules July 13, 2024