A fork of Rural Dictionary
British equivalent to the USA's "thrift store".
"The band's clothes look like they were nicked from the local charity shop."
A simple term which means the same as, but avoids having to say, "artists, photographers, sculptors, painters, designers, architects, crafts makers..." etc.
"Creatives can't afford to stay in that part of the city now that the developers are moving in and renovating the old properties."
1) When an off-road cyclist is able to negotiate a regular route without thinking about it, he is able to "flow". 2) The way a racing track for off-road mountain bikers is planned and prepared; it must have good "flow".
"I'm getting the flow of the route now." "The trail rolls and winds through beautiful open fields and wooded areas and generally has a nice flow."
Common British slang for "stolen". See also: pinched, taxed, half-inched, lifted, knocked off, 'fell off the back of a lorry'.
"The band's clothes look like they were nicked from the local Oxfam's reject pile."
Highly manipulated photograph or photographs, created using the Adobe Photoshop software. The results usually fool the eye into thinking that the photoshopped image is a single original photograph. If on the internet, created with a satirical or humourous intent. If in print, often referring to illicit manipulation of a photojournalism image.
"I know that my newspaper has no writen policy on this kind of photoshoppery, but..."
A Goth Girl who is under age 14. Not a label for a brain-dead follow-my-leader girl - a kindergoth does the whole Goth thing with a touch of irony yet listens to Wagner and reads Gormenghast too. (Minor alternative use: name used by some immature 'mature' goths to deride young 'new goths'. Kindergoth is used by them as an equivalent to 'newbie' or 'plastic punk'). See also: babygoth, baby-bats, kinderwhore, pixie.
"Gloom County's resident kindergoth reads a lot of Sandman."