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Quiz : RAF Slang


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Quiz time!

Bit of fun. No pints, no points or prizes  (just bragging rights).

Define the following WW2 RAF slang terms.

(Those caught Googling under desks will be sent to the Headmaster for a stern talking to, and a letter home to mother!) :D

 

Kite

Bandit

Mae West

Brolly

Sparks

(The) Drink

Meat wagon

(The) Juice

Heat wagon

(The) Ditch

Burton, gone for a

Scramble

Grow-bag

Dhobi dust

Char

Bus driver

Plumber

Fang farrier

God botherer

(Mr) Fireworks

Gremlin

Snowdrop

Oppo

Winco

Best blue

Glamour boys

Milk run

Scrambled eggs

Tin fish

Kipper Fleet

Banana boat

Pebble Monkey

Bogey

Ropey

Rigger

Nickel

Blower

Sweeny

 

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A lot of those are multi service rather than RAF specific. Eg:

Fang farrier = dentist

Oppo = mate (lit, opposite number), or ops officer

God botherer = chaplain

Tin fish = torpedo

I could go on (and on). 

Nigel

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10 minutes ago, Deggers said:

 

Kite                          Aeroplane

Bandit                     Enemy aircraft

Mae West               life jacket

Brolly                      parachute I guess

Sparks                    Electrician

(The) Drink             The sea

Meat wagon           Ambulance

(The) Ditch             Crash land in the drink

Burton, gone for a      Expired, gone to meet his maker etc

Scramble                get in the air quickly

Oppo                       crew

Winco                      Wing Commander

Glamour boys          Pilots

Scrambled eggs      decoration on senior officers hats

Bogey                      see Bandit

 

Bob.

Edited by Lebro
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Kite Plane

Bandit German or whatever opposing force

Mae West Life Jacket

Brolly Parachute

Sparks Electrician

(The) Drink The sea

Meat wagon Ambulance

(The) Juice Petrol/aviation spirit

Heat wagon ?

(The) Ditch In the channel

Burton, gone for a Dead/Goner

Scramble Immediate take off

Grow-bag?

Dhobi dust?

Char Tea

Bus driver Transport command pilot

Plumber Doctor?

Fang farrier Dentist

God botherer Chaplain or any committed member of the faith

(Mr) Fireworks Armourer

Gremlin Anything that stopped working was sid to have been attacked by Gremlins

Snowdrop Military Police

Oppo Another crew member

Winco Wing Commander

Best blue No1 Uniform

Glamour boys Fighter pilots

Milk run Regular operational flight where there was no likelihood of oppostion

Scrambled eggs Braid on officers cap

Tin fish Torpedo

Kipper Fleet Air sea rescue launches

Banana boat Seaplane

Pebble Monkey?

Bogey Opposing force airplane

Ropey Not very good

Rigger Airframe mechanic

Nickel?

Blower Telephone

Sweeny Something strange as in Sweeney Todd/Odd

Thats as many as I could get straight off

Stuart.

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That's bagged most of 'em, Stuart. :)

Yep, "the Ditch" is The English Channel.  "The Juice" being the North Sea.

Bus driver is a transport / bomber pilot

Banana boat is an aircraft carrier (rather than a seaplane).

But, on the right lines with Sweeny Todd. It's "a haircut to service standards."

 

So, just these :

Heat wagon

Grow-bag

Dhobi dust

Plumber

Pebble Monkey

Nickel

Edited by Deggers
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2 minutes ago, Hamish said:

Grow bag = sleeping bag ?

Army term for a sleeping bag is a green maggot or doss bag. I suspect there was no wartime RAF term because sleeping bags for military personnel were only introduced in around the 1960s. Wartime soldiers and airmen in the field would have made do with a grey blanket if they had one.

I have the vaguest recollection that grow bags were service issue 'drawers, cellular' (ie underpants), I definitely remember the term but might be mis-remembering what it meant.

Military slang is fascinating as it reflects so many of the times and places where British forces were stationed. Hence so many Indian/Hindi borrowed words, even if post-war soldiers often have no idea where they came from. Eg bondook (rifle), sangar (protective shelter, later a watchtower in Northern Ireland, and by derivation sangar-banger for a local female positively disposed towards the security forces), buckshee (spare, free, surplus), blighty, cushy and dekko (all now in general English).

The Royal Marines naturally use a lot of naval jargon like having a wet (cup of tea) mixed with army slang. Also, while Royal Marines yomp, Paras tab. Those terms became more widely used throughout the services after the Falklands conflict.

Speaking of comestibles, we of course have egg banjo (fried egg between two slices of white bread), NATO standard (instant coffee, milk and two sugars), stickies (any form of confectionary) and the prospect of those, or indeed any positive outcome: chuffed to Naafi-breaks.

Nigel

 

 

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I think "Dhobi dust" predates both RAF and Navy usage.    A "dhobi" is a member of a caste of laundry workers in India, for whom the Army would have become customers at a very early date, possible when it wasn't the British Army, but the ones run by the East India Company in the 18th Century.

 

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1 hour ago, john.r.davies said:

I think "Dhobi dust" predates both RAF and Navy usage.    A "dhobi" is a member of a caste of laundry workers in India, for whom the Army would have become customers at a very early date, possible when it wasn't the British Army, but the ones run by the East India Company in the 18th Century.

 

Yes a lot of those terms, like dhobi taken to mean laundry, were in widespread use across the Raj. Some of the well known ones, like jodhpurs and bungalow, got brought back and used by civilians in Britain, while others only survived in service use. Eg chogie shop which I assume is from and Middle East/South Asian word, possibly disparaging, but in the Army means a kiosk-type shop on a larger operational military base, usually with an Asian proprietor. They would sometimes also take in dhobi and do uniform repairs and alterations etc which might be needed if you partook of too many chogie-burgers and hence became a Tubby Two Belts or a JAFFA (Just Another Fat F****** A**hole).

Happy days.

Nigel

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Just to tie up the last few then :

Grow-bag  =  a flight suit, so named due to its untidy appearance.

Plumber  =  a member of the armament / ground trade.

Nickel  =  a sortie over enemy territory to drop leaflets.

Bonus points to those who posted additional information . . . especially Nigel (I'm definitely adopting "Chogie-burgers" and "Tubby Two Belts" into my everyday conversation, Nigel!) :D.

Cheers all, Deggers 

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 another common one was 'fairy'     a flight line radar/wireless techie, used in a derogatory sense of course mainly by riggers and engine fitters  ( the heavies)

Less common:  Zobbit  - a commissioned officer    but I came across it only during my apprenticeship.

how about Knuckle draggers  -  the RAF Regiment

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