- bugger off
- intransitive verb Date: 1922 slang British leave, depart — often used as a command
New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.
New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.
bugger off — verb leave immediately; used usually in the imperative form Scram! • Syn: ↑scram, ↑buzz off, ↑fuck off, ↑get • Hypernyms: ↑leave, ↑go forth, ↑go away … Useful english dictionary
bugger off — phrasal verb [intransitive] Word forms bugger off : present tense I/you/we/they bugger off he/she/it buggers off present participle buggering off past tense buggered off past participle buggered off British impolite 1) [usually in imperative]… … English dictionary
bugger off — 1. interjection a) Go away. Bugger off! You are joking, arent you? b) An expression of disagreement or disbelief. Syn: get lost, fuck off 2 … Wiktionary
bugger off — PHRASAL VERB: V P If someone buggers off, they go away quickly and suddenly. People often say bugger off as a rude way of telling someone to go away. [BRIT, INFORMAL, RUDE] Syn: clear off … English dictionary
bugger off — 1. v. go away; leave; get out of here 2. v. imp. go away; shove off. Bugger off. Just go away … English slang
bugger off — go away. → bugger … English new terms dictionary
bugger off — I Australian Slang smb. is told to go, in a not very nice way; shove off, get lost II Kiwi (New Zealand Slang) piss off, shove off, get out … English dialects glossary
bugger off — piss off, shove off, get out … Kiwi (New Zealand slang)
Bugger off — smb. is told to go, in a not very nice way; shove off, get lost … Dictionary of Australian slang
bugger-off — Verb. Get lost, clear off. Usually said in annoyance and in the imper … English slang and colloquialisms