Results for “rum shop”
A small neighbourhood bar selling rum.
A cold, broody loner paired with a relentlessly cheerful partner.
Nicking apples (or any fruit) straight off someone else's tree.
The fetish-leaning leather title contest tied to Drummer magazine, run annually in San Francisco from 1981.
A wild horse.
Reliable information; a tip.
a charity / thrift shop
a liquor store
Skin and bones; very skinny (Cuba)
Did something flawlessly and completely — absolutely nailed it with nothing left to criticize.
Leading someone on with just enough attention to keep them interested, without real commitment.
Cheap frozen cordial lollies in a long plastic tube — peak Brummie corner-shop nostalgia.
The little delivery unit that ferries items from the shop out to your heroes.
Warzone's in-match shop — trade cash for gear and lives.
Skeleton-trumpet onomatopoeia — the sound a meme skeleton makes.
The off-licence — corner shop that sells the booze.
Tobacco — the rollie kind, not the shop-bought twenty.
Brummie gold standard — means brilliant, excellent, top-tier.
Brummie for mad, daft, a bit cracked.
A forward roll — Brummie kids don't do somersaults, they do gambols.
Brummie term of affection for your sister — not what it sounds like down south.
Brummie 'love' or 'hun' — drops into any sentence like a verbal cuddle.
A roundabout — Brummies call traffic islands, well, islands.
A drain or sewer, Brummie style.
Up the canal — Brummie for a walk along the waterway.
To wander around with no real plan — usually round the shops.
To have a full-blown tantrum.
Brummie for hands, usually big rough ones.
Brummie / Black Country for head.
Brummie smush of 'how are you?'
Brummie goodbye — 'ta-ra a bit', see you soon.
Left-handed (Brummie/Black Country).
A crumpet — what the West Midlands calls them.
Brummie nickname for someone from the Black Country.
Bonfire, in Brummie/Black Country mouths — especially the Guy Fawkes one.
To mutter, grumble or moan under your breath.
To worry, fret or fuss — the Brummie pronunciation of 'worry'.
To pester, bother or nag — Brummie/Black Country spelling of 'mither'.
Address for a shopkeeper or service worker.
Groceries; 'doing the messages' = going for the shopping.