noun Street Slang

trouble

TRUB-ul · noun · informal

Wife (clipped from 'trouble and strife').

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Definitions

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The shortened form of 'trouble and strife', Cockney rhyming slang for wife.

“Me and the trouble are off to Margate for the weekend.”
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trouble In A Sentence

Me and the trouble are off to Margate for the weekend.

Origin & Usage

Clip of 'trouble and strife'; the rhyming word 'strife' dropped in normal speech.

People Also Ask

What does "trouble" mean in Cockney slang?

It means wife, clipped from "trouble and strife," the full rhyming-slang phrase.

Why is a wife called "trouble and strife"?

"Strife" rhymes with "wife"; as with most Cockney slang, the rhyming word is dropped so only "trouble" is said aloud.

Is calling your wife "the trouble" offensive?

It's meant cheekily and affectionately rather than seriously, though the joke does lean on the old stereotype of marital nagging.

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