Slang Terms

SPWaW is a tactical squad-level World War II game on single platoon or up to an entire battalion through Europe and the Pacific (1939 to 1945).

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Figmo
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Slang Terms

Post by Figmo »

This can be Slang for any language. If you've heard one and don't know what it means - post it here and somebody will know - I hope!!

Some common American English Slang are:

To Grease Somebody = To Kill Them - IIRC this came from the 1920s when the gangsters called the Tompson Machine gun a grease gun.

Will you carry me there = Southern American term for "how about a ride - in your car".

The Perfect woman = She's Barefoot, Pregnant and in the kitchen.

Figmo


"Laws that forbid the carrying of arms...disarm only those who are neither inclined nor determined to commit crimes ...Such laws make things worse for the assaulted and better for the assailants; they serve rather to encourage than to prevent homicides, f
lynchc
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Post by lynchc »

Good ones!

Of course your definition of the perfect woman was incomplete. You forgot:

Four feet tall, a flat head, and no teeth!

Grease gun was also the name given to the M3 submachine gun issued to American tank crews in WWII and in some places still in use today.
JediMessiah
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Post by JediMessiah »

im not sure the tommy was referred to as the grease gun....more likely the chicago typewriter.....the m3 was called a gease gun however, because of its use by tank crews and its resemblence to a grease gun
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Alby
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Post by Alby »

Originally posted by Figmo:
This can be Slang for any language. If you've heard one and don't know what it means - post it here and somebody will know - I hope!!

Some common American English Slang are:

To Grease Somebody = To Kill Them - IIRC this came from the 1920s when the gangsters called the Tompson Machine gun a grease gun.

Figmo

Was it called "grease gun"? thought this refered to something else.
I know they called em tommy guns or choppers.
Oh well no biggy, just making conversation...heheh
Alby

Pack Rat
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Post by Pack Rat »

They actually look like a grease gun, the kind used to grease your car. They were still issued to tank recovery crews when I was in as late as 72. That's what we called them anyway. They had a folding metal wire stock ( I guess it folded) and had a straight clip of 45 cal.. I think those that actually fired it said it had a recoil that went pretty much straight up, so add a very short barrel and I suspect a weapon only good for very close combat.

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Figmo
Posts: 548
Joined: Sun May 28, 2000 8:00 am
Location: Pennsylvania, USA

Post by Figmo »

I wasn't sure about the Thompson being called a Grease gun - and figured somebody would correct me!! Image

Back to Slang Terms I found this site
http://www.manythings.org/slang/

With bunches of them!!

And this site with an explanation of "American Slang"
http://www.bartleby.com/185/52.html

Some of it's pretty funny!!

Figmo
"Laws that forbid the carrying of arms...disarm only those who are neither inclined nor determined to commit crimes ...Such laws make things worse for the assaulted and better for the assailants; they serve rather to encourage than to prevent homicides, f
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