Twists, Slugs and Roscoes: A Glossary of Hardboiled Slang
If you've ever read a hardboiled detective story, you may have come across a sentence like,
"I jammed the roscoe in his button and said, 'Close your yap, bo, or I squirt metal.'"
Something like this isn't too hard to decipher. But what if you encounter,
"The flim-flammer jumped in the flivver and faded."
"You dumb mug, get your mitts off the marbles before I stuff that mud-pipe down your mush--and tell your moll to hand over the mazuma."
"The sucker with the schnozzle poured a slug but before he could scram out two shamuses showed him the shiv and said they could send him over."
You may need to translate this into normal English just to be able to follow the plot.
Or maybe you want to seem tougher. Why get in a car when you can hop in a boiler? Why tell someone to shut up when you can tell them to close their head? Why threaten to discharge a firearm when you can say, "Dust, pal, or I pump lead!"
This is the language spoken by Philip Marlowe, Sam Spade, Mike Hammer and the Continental Op. When Cagney, Bogart, Robinson and Raft got in a turf war, this is how they talked.
Now, with the help of this glossary, you too can speak it like a native!
A
* Alderman: A man's pot belly.
* Ameche: Telephone
* Ankle:
o (n) Woman
o (v) To walk
B
* Babe: Woman
* Baby: A person, can be said to either a man or a woman
* Bangtails: Racehorses
* Barber: Talk
* Baumes rush: Senator Caleb H. Baumes sponsored a New York law (the Baumes Law) which called for automatic life imprisonment of any criminal convicted more than three times. Some criminals would move to a state that didn't have this law in order to avoid its penalty should they be caught again, and this was known as a "Baumes rush," because of the similarity to "bum's rush."
* Be on the nut, To: To be broke
* Bean-shooter: Gun
* Beezer: Nose






