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Adams, Douglas – Meaning of Liff

SCRABSTER (n.)

One of those dogs which has it off on your leg during tea.

SCRAMOGE (vb.)

To cut oneself whilst licking envelopes.

SCRANTON (n.)

A person who, after the declaration of the bodmin (q.v.), always says,’… But I only had the tomato soup.’

SCRAPTOFT (n.)

The absurd flap of hair a vain and balding man grows long above one ear to comb it to the other ear.

SCREEB (n.)

To make the noise of a nylon anorak rubbing against a pair of corduroy trousers.

SCREGGAN (n. banking)

The crossed-out bit caused by people putting the wrong year on their cheques all through January.

SCREMBY (n.)

The dehydrated felt-tip pen attached by a string to the ‘Don’t Forget’ board in the kitchen which has never worked in living memory but which no one can be bothered to throw away.

SCROGGS (n.)

The stout pubic hairs which protrude from your helping of moussaka in a cheap Greek restaurant.

SCRONKEY (n.)

Something that hits the window as a result of a violent sneeze.

SCULLET (n.)

The last teaspoon in the washing up.

SEATTLE (vb.)

To make a noise like a train going along.

SHALUNT (n.)

One who wears Trinidad and Tobago T-shirts on the beach in Bali to prove they didn’t just win the holiday in a competition or anything.

SHANKLIN (n.)

The hoop of skin around a single slice of salami.

SHENANDOAH (n.)

The infinite smugness of one who knows they are entitled to a place in a nuclear bunker.

SHEPPY (n.)

Measure of distance (equal to approximately seven eighths of a mile), defined as the closest distance at which sheep remain picturesque.

SHIFNAL (n.,vb.)

An awkward shuffling walk caused by two or more people in a hurry accidentally getting into the same segment of revolving door. A similar effect is achieved by people entering three-legged races unwisely joined at the neck instead of the ankles.

SHIRMERS (pl.n.)

Tall young men who stand around smiling at weddings as if to suggest that they know they bride reather well.

SHOEBURYNESS (abs.n.) The vague uncomfortable feeling you get when sitting on a seat which is still warm from somebody else’s bottom.

SHRIVENHAM (n.)

One of Germaine Greer’s used-up lovers.

SIDCUP (n.)

One of those hats made from tying knots in the corners of a handkerchief.

SILESIA (n. medical)

The inability to remember, at the critical moment, which is the better side of a boat to be seasick off.

SILLOTH (n.)

Something that was sticky, and is now furry, found on the carpet under the sofa the morning after a party.

SIMPRIM (n.)

The little movement of false modesty by which a girl with a cavernous visible cleavage pulls her skirt down over her knees.

SITTINGBOURNE (n.)

One of those conversions where both people are waiting for the other one to shut up so they can get on with their bit.

SKEGNESS (n.)

Nose excreta of a malleable consistency.

SKELLOW (adj.)

Descriptive of the satisfaction experienced when looking at a really good dry-stone wall.

SKENFRITH (n.)

The flakes of athlete’s foot found inside socks.

SKETTY (n.)

Apparently self-propelled little dance a beer glass performs in its own puddle.

SKIBBEREEN (n.)

The noise made by a sunburned thighs leaving plastic chair.

SLIGO (n.)

An unnamed and exotic sexual act which people like to believe that famous films stars get up to in private. ‘To commit slingo.’

SLOGARIE (n.)

Hillwalking dialect for the seven miles of concealed rough moorland which lie between what you though was the top of the hill and what actually is.

SLUBBERY (n.)

The gooey drips of wax that dribble down the sides of a candle so beloved by Italian restaurants with Chianti bottles instead of wallpaper.

SLUGGAN (n.)

A lurid facial bruise which everyone politely omits to mention because it’s obvious that you had a punch-up with your spouse last night – but which into a door. It is useless to volunteer the true explanation because nobody will believe it.

SLUMBAY (n.)

The cigarette end someone discovers in the mouthful of lager they have just swigged from a can at the end of party.

SMARDEN (vb.)

To keep your mouth shut by smiling determinedly through you teeth. Smardening is largely used by people trying to give the impression that they’re enjoying a story they’ve heard at least six times before.

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Categories: Douglas Adams
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