A jakie is a homeless alcoholic. Country: Scottish English | Subject Area: Drinking, pubs and bars | Usage Type: Both or All Words Used.
/ (ˈdʒeɪkɪ) / noun. Scot slang, derogatory a homeless alcoholic.
Jackeen is a pejorative term for someone from Dublin, Ireland. The Oxford English Dictionary defines it as a "contemptuous designation for a self-assertive worthless fellow", citing the earliest documented use from the year 1840.
A Jakey is a tramp or scruffy personSc.
Noun. jakey (plural jakeys or jakies) (chiefly Scotland) A homeless drunk.
British Dictionary definitions for jakes
jakes. / (dʒeɪks) / noun. an archaic slang word for lavatory. Southwest English dialect human excrement.
3. 1956); (13) hairy Mary, (a) a fish pie made with mashed potatoes and flaked boiled fish (Abd.
(ˈʃæɡə ) British vulgar, slang. a person who has sexual intercourse. Collins English Dictionary.
Weegie is a slang term referring to people from Glasgow in Scotland, which is used as a noun or adjective. It is a contraction of the word Glaswegian, referring to people from Glasgow. An informal and, to some, insulting term in Scotland, it can be heard regularly on radio stations such as Talk 107 or Sunny Govan FM.
Bawhair means pubic hair in Scotland but it also is used as a unit of measurement eg That car just missed me by a bawhair.
"Feck" is a form of effeck, which is in turn the Scots cognate of the modern English word effect. However, this Scots noun has additional significance: Efficacy; force; value; return. Amount; quantity (or a large amount/quantity) The greater or larger part (when used with a definite article)
noun Chiefly Irish Slang: Vulgar. a mean and contemptible person, especially a braggart. a stupid and incompetent person.
Fanny pack: The term fanny in Irish is applied exclusively to female genitalia, so whatever you are wearing, it isn't a fanny pack; it's a waist-belt or a waist-pouch.
In the Glasgow area a wee barra is an informal way of referring to any small person that the speaker likes, or at least does not dislike. The Glasgow flea market is known as The Barras. barrie or barry (pronounced bar-ri) Something which is barrie is very good or very attractive.
Tha gaol agam ort (I love you)
/læs/ A lass is a girl. Your Scottish folk dance teacher might announce, "Lads line up on that side, lasses on this side!"
The locals are called “Glaswegians” and they speak in a very distinctive way. It is called Glaswegian or Glasgow patter.
beddie-baa, beddie-byes, baa-baa, buisty-baa: col. A (child's) bed. cradlie-baa: To lie still, to cuddle down. A lullaby, hishie-baa: To lull a child to sleep.
Jimmy in British English
(ˈdʒɪmɪ ) noun. Central Scotland slang. an informal term of address to a male stranger.
CORBIE, Corby, Korbi, n. [ ′kɔrbɪ̢, ′korbi] 1. The raven, Corvus corax, often regarded as a bird of ill omen.
(countable, UK, Ireland, Australia, slang) A woman of loose morals.
Smourich – A kiss!
Meaning:star of the sea. With Irish origins, Molly is a girl's name which is simply put, quintessentially Irish. Meaning “star of the sea,” there are many Irish Mollys that have gone down in Gaelic folklore.
MOLL, n. Also molly. As in Eng., a familiar form of Mary, a contemptuous name for a woman.
Another Scots word for child is wain (pronounced way-n)