Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Is anyone familiar with the term "a full biffter" or a "half biffter"
4 Answers
Not sure if I've spelled biffter correctly - one f or two ff's. I've taken it to me something like "the whole nine yards" and in a reference to a full breakfast as in "we had the full biffter" meaning there were eggs, potatoes, bacaon/sausage/ham. A friend of mine from Scotland was familiar with the term but we were never able to track it down. Thanks.
Answers
to me the full biffter means you've had everything you possibly could and it was great great, definatly the whole nine yards!!
12:45 Sun 21st Feb 2010
The latest edition of Chambers Dictionary offers bifter or biftah and exactly the same definition as I gave three years ago in Buildersmate's link...a spliff. (I don't believe it was even IN the previous edition.) And the link I provided back then offers further hints as to the source. I can't vouch for any of them.
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