garms

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See also: Garms

English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From garments.

Noun[edit]

garms pl (plural only)

  1. (MLE) clothing
    • 1990, "The Bedside "Guardian."[1], page 338:
      Mr Godfrey elaborates: 'Unlike New York, where violence is operating on its own irrational plane, on he streets of London there are only two reasons for trouble: your "garms or your area.
    • 2003, “Your Mother's Got a Penis” (track 15)‎[2]performed by Goldie Looking Chain:
      In internet rooms and computer mainframes, there's loads of emails about your mother's blue veins. Not the ones in her legs or the back of her arms, but the ones in her member hidden in her garms.
    • 2008 November, Susie Dent, How to Talk Like a Local: A National Phrasebook from the Author of Word Perfect[3]:
      garms - threads, clothes (London and the South-East): Garms is a term short for garments and, although dating back to Old London, is still in use by the capital's teenagers today. Garms that are buff and criss (cool and stylish, or rude) are of course the best (or nang).

Anagrams[edit]