noun General Slang

Trouble And Strife

/ˌtrʌbəl ən ˈstraɪf/ · noun · slang

Cockney for wife — 'trouble and strife' rhymes with wife, clipped to 'the trouble'.

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Definitions

1

A wife. 'Trouble and strife' rhymes with 'wife', and is clipped to 'the trouble', dropping the rhyming word.

“The trouble and strife has got me decorating all weekend.”
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2

Used loosely of any long-term female partner running the household.

“Me and the trouble are off to Spain in June.”
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3

Clipped to 'the trouble', one's spouse, spoken with rueful pub humour.

“Best get home, the trouble's waiting.”
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Trouble And Strife In A Sentence

The trouble and strife reckons I'm out too much.
I'll have to ask the trouble before I commit to anything.
He never makes a decision without the trouble's say-so.

Origin & Usage

Late-Victorian East End rhyming slang on 'wife'; the wry pairing of 'trouble' and 'strife' is typical of Cockney's affectionate-cynical humour about married life, and sits among the domestic coinages of the era following Hotten's 1859 dictionary.

Variants the trouble

People Also Ask

What does trouble and strife mean?

It's Cockney rhyming slang for wife. 'Strife' rhymes with 'wife', and it's shortened to 'the trouble'.

Is trouble and strife rude about wives?

It's tongue-in-cheek pub humour rather than genuine insult, part of Cockney's affectionate teasing about married life.

Where did trouble and strife come from?

From Victorian-era East End speech, the same living tradition Hotten began recording in 1859.

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