Film, Media & TV0 min ago
Gherkins
2 Answers
My Mother in law used to call large pickled gherkins wally wallies.
Has anybody else come across this term as I can't find a ref to it anywhere.
[PS excelllent v large bottles, 99p Lidl]
Has anybody else come across this term as I can't find a ref to it anywhere.
[PS excelllent v large bottles, 99p Lidl]
Answers
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a British colloquial term for the gherkin. Originally it was London slang corruption of the word "Olive" but when Eastern European immigrants arrived in the late 19th Century they brought a liking for picked cucumbers which, like olives, were sold from wooden barrels and also began to be referred to as a wallies (mostly in the east-end of London
a British colloquial term for the gherkin. Originally it was London slang corruption of the word "Olive" but when Eastern European immigrants arrived in the late 19th Century they brought a liking for picked cucumbers which, like olives, were sold from wooden barrels and also began to be referred to as a wallies (mostly in the east-end of London
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wally
Wikipedia says:
Slang:
a British colloquial term for the gherkin. Originally it was London slang corruption of the word "Olive" but when Eastern European immigrants arrived in the late 19th Century they brought a liking for picked cucumbers which, like olives, were sold from wooden barrels and also began to be referred to as a wallies (mostly in the east-end of London).
Wikipedia says:
Slang:
a British colloquial term for the gherkin. Originally it was London slang corruption of the word "Olive" but when Eastern European immigrants arrived in the late 19th Century they brought a liking for picked cucumbers which, like olives, were sold from wooden barrels and also began to be referred to as a wallies (mostly in the east-end of London).