Country Dictionary

A fork of Rural Dictionary

L&P

A soda drink made in New Zealand. Stands for lemon and paeroa. Famous for the NZ stubbies ad and it's slogan: "World famous in NZ since ageeees ago."

"Oh bro gimme some of dat L&P!" "Just went down to the dairy to get me sum L&P."

by xXxshawtyxXx November 27, 2006

L&P

A kind of soft drink. Manufactured and sold in NZ. Their slogan is a screwed up one.... "L&P, World Famous in New Zealand."

Example: * Shinosuke drinks his L&P. <Person1> What L&P?? <Shinosuke> You dont know what L&P is?! It's world famous!! <Person1> No? Never heard of it. <Shinosuke> Haha! Of course! It's world famous in New Zealand!! <Person1> . . . * Person1 kicks Shinosuke in the nutz. * Shinosuke dies.

by Shinosuke May 12, 2004

L&P

A Kiwi drink called Lemon and Paeroa or L&P for short. Basically Sprite but with like lemon syrup that makes it different. Idk its hard to explain

"Hey can I get a medium L&P please?"

by lilhori June 23, 2018

l&p

"Leftist and Progressive" - The kind of person who sent money to Bernie Sanders in 2015-16, hoping that change could be achieved non-violently by working through the political system.

A lot of my friends are L&P types and are angry at the way Bernie Sanders was stabbed in the back by the Democratic Party power structure.

by mistah charley, ph.d. August 15, 2016

l&p

A Kiwi soft drink. Stands for "Lemon and Paeroa" - Paeora being a small Waikato town where the drink was concieved many moons ago, from pure spring water and Lemon flavouring. While not made that way anymore, it still tastes awesome.

Dion: "You like that? I think it smell like Lemongrass" Me: "Shut up Dion"

by KeeWee January 11, 2005

L/p

Looks/personality. Means rating someone's looks out of 10 and their personality out of 10. Usually used on ask fm or on snapchat. Normally seen being used in Dublin

Screenshot for a l/p in chat. Kate only gave me a l=5 on ask fm the other day!

by Angel4455 March 25, 2016

l/p

An "L/P" is a login/password. It is required to get access to certain sites or servers.

"I need an l/p to access that page"

by Felicia January 31, 2003