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Vrb phrs. To do something foolish or risky. E.g."Pulling a stunt like that again will put you in serious trouble." {Informal} Verb. To give oral sex, but more commonly to fellate. Possibly from rhyming slang, plate of ham, meaning gam, an abbreviation of ' gamahuche'. Verb. To succeed in achieving something, frequently something difficult. E.g."I pulled off an Evil Knievel and jumped the car on my bike." {Informal} Verb. To look lustfully or lecherously at someone or something. E.g."He shouldn't be allowed to work at the swimming pool, he's always perving over the ladies."
Verb. 1. To idle away time. E.g."I've just been pratting around in my bedroom playing online games." The ultimate source from which almost all Goon Show character lists on the internet have been derived is Noun. A police officer. From a character in Noddy, a series of children's books written by Enid Blyton in the 1950s. Bentine was part of the regular cast for the first two seasons. As a tribute of sorts, unheard characters called Bentine are sometimes referred to in later episodes (e.g. The Man Who Never Was)
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The Goon Show cast members and characters — This is a list of regular cast members of the 1950s British radio programme The Goon Show and the characters they portrayed.Harry Secombe Neddie Seagoon Main article: Neddie Seagoon Uncle OscarUncle of Henry and Min. A very old pensioner (Henry… … Wikipedia Adj. Drunk, intoxicated with alcohol. Also spelt pallatic and parlatic. Possibly a corruption of 'paralytic'. [N. England/Ireland use] A strange sexless thing that continually changed its voice and responded often with the phrase 'Yes Darling!'. This part was also played by Ray Ellington (e.g., see " Rommel's Treasure"), and by Wallace Greenslade (" Personal Narrative"). A camp person who makes infrequent appearances. Although one of the earliest established characters, he was absent from the show for a long period and reappeared in the middle of the show's run. Flowerdew is a dab hand with a sewing machine, especially when, as in The Nasty Affair at the Burami Oasis, Seagoon tells him to run up a flag. Also appears in The Histories of Pliny the Elder; when he tells Seagoon to "Shut up! It was perfectly quiet till you came along!", Seagoon replies, "You're a sailor, and sailors don't care!". And in The String Robberies, Seagoon's train arrives in Scotland with a great blast of steam – Flowerdew is mortified: "There should be a law against trains letting off steam when people are wearing kilts!" Comparable with the characters Julian and Sandy from Round the Horne. Verb. 1. To place or put (something). E.g."Come in, please. Pop your bag down there and we'll have a nice cuppa before I show you to your room." {Informal}
A Jewish character, with an aversion to non-Kosher water. Bloodnok despises Cyril due to his anti-Semitism; when, in King Solomon's Mines, Cyril is indeed drowning in "non-Kosher water", Blooknok exclaims "Goodness! A crocodile making straight for Cyril!", fires, and then exclaims tersely. "Got him. Now to get the crocodile." Vrb phrs. To be an unwanted, extra person, usually in the company of a courting couple. See ' gooseberry'. Adj. Very ugly. Originally a ruffian, and taken from the New York/Baltimore gang of the mid 1800s named the Plug Uglies. [Orig. U.S.]
Adj. Denoting excellence in pop music or associated culture. Sometimes used more generally to describe something excellent or fabulous. E.g."Of all the performers on the show Kylie Minogue was the most poptastic." See the suffix '...tastic'.