by Bob799 August 6, 2006

Mitch - "I'm Really sorry boss, there's been a; Death in the family/my dogs died/my mother has rabies/it's the apocalypse/I've got aids/I slept with your sister last night (and she was faaannnnttasssstic)
Boss - " That sounds like a fuckin' sick blag to me kid"
Boss - " That sounds like a fuckin' sick blag to me kid"
by David 'Beef' Hyams August 11, 2008

by kitsch.object September 14, 2003

The internet. Origin not fully known. Most likely has roots in the word "blog", and the idea that the internet is constructed of a series of pipes that transport information from place to place in the same manner and with striking metaphorical reference to sewage.
by the only name left March 9, 2009

Pronounced kaarl/lɛ/bl(ə)g.
One who talks about a journey, one journey in fact His own and no one else's, a blagger, stirrer, bull-shitter and dreamseller.
One who talks about a journey, one journey in fact His own and no one else's, a blagger, stirrer, bull-shitter and dreamseller.
Karl le blag is a man who tells you one thing and then does another. In the financial game for himself. Boarding the money train which doesn't actually exist.
Can be used plural for leblaggers
Can be used plural for leblaggers
by Pshlll February 27, 2017

Comes from the old word "blackguard", a contemptible and untrustworthy person, which was pronounced "blaggard".
The sound of the last part "ard" became confused with the suffix "ard": meaning a person who does an action, as in drunkard. "Blag" becoming the contemptible untrustworthy action.
I first came across it as a teenager working on a building site nearly 50years ago, when an old Irishman accused another of "fucking blaggarding". I didn't know what it meant, but was obviously a bad thing to accuse someone of and not done lightly. These days it seems to have lost its former vehemence and is used more in the manner of petty criminals boasting of their offences.
The sound of the last part "ard" became confused with the suffix "ard": meaning a person who does an action, as in drunkard. "Blag" becoming the contemptible untrustworthy action.
I first came across it as a teenager working on a building site nearly 50years ago, when an old Irishman accused another of "fucking blaggarding". I didn't know what it meant, but was obviously a bad thing to accuse someone of and not done lightly. These days it seems to have lost its former vehemence and is used more in the manner of petty criminals boasting of their offences.
"Where did you get that from?"
"Ha ha ha, fucking blagged it didn't I.
"Did your wife say anything about the time you got home?"
"Yes, I gave her some blag about working late."
"Ha ha ha, fucking blagged it didn't I.
"Did your wife say anything about the time you got home?"
"Yes, I gave her some blag about working late."
by A handle not already used January 24, 2020
