Author:Graeme Garden,Tim Brooke-Taylor,Barry Cryer,Jon Naismith
Do words fail you? Never again, once you've become the proud owner of The Complete Uxbridge English Dictionary.
Every word has a meaning, but over the years those meanings change. Dip into these helpfully illustrated pages and you'll find many of the words you use every day without ever realising that their up-to-date definition is something entirely different.
Words like 'bunny' (rather like a bun), or 'cherish' (rather like a chair), 'Cardiology' (the study of knitwear) or 'buggery' (the study of insects), 'Venezuala' (a gondola with a harpoon) or 'Norway' (a Geordie exclamation of surprise), 'ivy' (the Roman for "four") or 'faculty' (cockney for "there's no more PG Tips").
Thanks to The Complete Uxbridge English Dictionary you can now use familiar, everyday words in total confidence, fully appraised of their latest meanings. Happy wording!
If the 2016 lexicon is just too bleak, take refuge in the most comprehensive list of Uxbridge definitions to date from the wags at BBC Radio 4’s I’m Sorry I Haven’t a Clue.
—— Stocking Filler of the Year , The TimesComedy genius... The funniest book I've read in years.
—— DAVID WALLIAMSA truly eye-opening book from a fantastic comedian.
—— ADAM KAYThe reader gets to know him as a good-natured, sometimes mischievous bloke - a real person and not just the comic with the electronic voice.
—— ChortleFunny, charming and full of unique insights.
—— FRANCESCA MARTINEZ, author of What the **** is Normal?Lee's wicked sense of humour shines through.
—— Andrew Hayden-SmithPRAISE FOR LOST VOICE GUY'S STAND-UP: 'Self-lacerating comedy with something to say.'
—— The GuardianPRAISE FOR LOST VOICE GUY'S STAND-UP: 'A talent for real anger that leaves us amused.'
—— The TimesPRAISE FOR LOST VOICE GUY'S STAND-UP: 'A mix of observation and self-deprecation which confirms he's got talent.'
—— The TelegraphPRAISE FOR LOST VOICE GUY'S STAND-UP: 'A comedian with an edge and a honed sense of his material.'
—— Front Row