Dictionary Definition
bollocks v : make a mess of, destroy or ruin; "I
botched the dinner and we had to eat out"; "the pianist screwed up
the difficult passage in the second movement" [syn: botch, bumble, fumble, botch up,
muff, blow, flub, screw up,
ball up,
spoil, muck up, bungle, fluff, bollix, bollix up,
bollocks
up, bobble, mishandle, louse up,
foul up,
mess up,
fuck
up]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
An alteration of ballocks.Pronunciation
- Noun, verb
- Interjection
Noun
(rarely used in the singular)- In the context of "UK|vulgar": The testicles (sometimes used in the singular)
- In the context of "UK|vulgar": Nonsense or information deliberately intended to mislead.
- In the context of "Ireland|vulgar": An idiot, an ignorant or disagreeable
person.
- Don't mind him; he's only an oul' bollocks!
- In the context of "UK|vulgar": A contraction of the dog's bollocks.
- Plural of bollock
Synonyms
- (testicles): see
- (nonsense): see
Derived terms
Verb
Interjection
- In the context of "UK|taboo|slang": Expressing anger, frustration, etc.
- Oh bollocks I am late for work!
Extensive Definition
"Bollocks" is a word of Anglo
Saxon origin, meaning "testicles". The word is often
used figuratively in English,
as a noun to mean "nonsense" or conversely to mean "top quality" or
"perfection", an expletive following a minor accident or
misfortune, and an adjective to mean "poor quality" or "useless".
In this respect, the term could be said to be a contranym. Similarly, the
common phrases "Bollocks to that!" or "That's a load of old
bollocks" express a distaste for a certain task, subject or
opinion; "the dog's bollocks" expresses the opposite, namely
admiration, pleasure or approval.
Perhaps the best-known use of the term is in the
title of the 1977 punk rock album
Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols. Testimony in a
resulting prosecution over the "obscene" term demonstrated that in
Old English the word referred to a priest, and could also be used
to mean "nonsense".
Etymology
The word has a long and distinguished history, with the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) giving examples of its usage dating back to the 13th century. One of the early references is John Wycliffe's Bible (1382), Leviticus xxii, 24: "Al beeste, that ... kitt and taken a wey the ballokes is, ye shulen not offre to the Lord..." (any beast that is cut and taken away the bollocks, you shall not offer to the Lord, i.e. castrated animals are not suitable as religious sacrifices).The OED states (with abbreviations expanded):
"Probably a derivative of Teutonic ball-, of which the Old English
representative would be inferred as beall-u, -a, or -e".
The Teutonic ball- in
turn probably derives from the Proto-Indo-European
base *bhel-, to inflate or swell. This base also forms the root of
many other words, including "phallus".
From the seventeenth to the nineteenth
century, bollocks or ballocks was allegedly used as a slang
term for a clergyman, although this meaning is not mentioned by the
OED's 1989 edition. For example, in 1864, the Commanding Officer of
the Straits Fleet regularly referred to his chaplain as "Ballocks".
It has been suggested that bollocks came to have its modern meaning
of "rubbish" because clergymen were notorious for talking rubbish
during their sermons.
Alternative spellings
"Ballock" is a variation of "bollock", which was in everyday usage in the medieval period, albeit rarely heard today. The connection with "ball" in the sense of "testis" is evident.The word is sometimes spelled as bollox or bollix
usually in order to make it appear less vulgar. In this case its meaning
is "to bungle", for example, "The project was going well, but my
boss bollixed it up." This is the sense in which the term "bollix"
is generally used in American
English, where the term "bollocks" is generally known only from
the title of the Sex Pistols album, and its original meaning is
almost unknown. "Bollixed up" is sometimes considered an
out-of-date expression that has largely been replaced by phrases
such as "screwed up," as
the latter term has gradually lost most of its previously vulgar
connotation. This spelling remains current in Ireland, however, for
example in the phrase "You're a bollix" (fool or unpleasant
person).
"Bollix" may also be used to refer to a
particularly nasty or awkward person, particularly in rural
Ireland, as in "He's a right Bollix, is that father Ted" or in the
traditional sense, refering to tesicals (as in standerd English)"Ah
Jaze!! right in me bollix!".
A modern folk
etymology claims that the correct singular of the word should
not be "bollock", but rather "pillock", commonly used as another
British
English insult (though usually without the testis connotation).
However, it appears that this is erroneous, and that the two words
are connected only by similarities in the spelling. Both "pillock"
and "cock" are probably
shortened forms of the Middle
English "pillicock", a slang term for "penis".
Severity
The relative severity of the various profanities, as perceived by the British public, was studied on behalf of the Broadcasting Standards Commission, Independent Television Commission, BBC and Advertising Standards Authority. The results of this jointly commissioned research were published in December 2000 in a paper called "Delete Expletives?". This placed "bollocks" in eighth position in terms of its perceived severity, positioning it between "prick" (seventh place) and "arsehole" (ninth place). By comparison, the word "balls" (which has a similar literal meaning) was ranked in 22nd place. Of the people surveyed, only 11% thought that "bollocks" could acceptably be broadcast at times before the notional 9pm "watershed" on television (radio does not have a watershed).Negative uses
Bollocks!
Bollocks! can be used as a standalone interjection to express strong disagreement. It dismisses a statement as nonsense, similar to "bullshit", but much stronger in its emphasis and implications. This can be expanded, for example, to "What a complete and utter load of bollocks!" An expression with a similar meaning is "Yer ballax!" (Your bollocks). "Bollocking" can be used to describe someone receiving a telling off or dressing down. Example: "I didn't do my homework. My teacher gave me a right bollocking.""Bollocks" can be used to annunciate a lie, an
incorrect statement, an unfair situation, a spot of bad luck or
something completely pointless, i.e "what a load of bollocks," or
"it's such complete bollocks.". A quotation from John
O'Farrell includes a range of examples of this usage: a
character attending a comedy awards ceremony said "These awards are
a load of bollocks. It's all bollocks, all of it. These people:
bollocks; this whole industry: complete bollocks; these prizes:
meaningless bollocks; all these free gifts: marketing bollocks;
this food: pure bollocks." Similarly, it is claimed that New Labour
spin
doctor Alastair
Campbell "routinely dismissed unwelcome news stories as
'bollocks', 'complete bollocks' and 'bollocks on stilts'".
A related usage is in expressing contempt for something or
someone. A Channel 4 TV
programme on 9
June 2005, dealing with the subject of testicular
cancer, was punningly titled Bollocks to Cancer. A similar
usage is the "Bollocks to Brussels" car
stickers, which were displayed by those wishing to express contempt
for European law.
Offensive T-shirts
This usage caused controversy when Tony Wright, a Leicestershire trader, was given an £80 fixed penalty fine by police for selling T-shirts bearing the slogan "Bollocks to Blair". This took place on 29 June 2006 at the Royal Norfolk Show; the police issued the penalty notice, quoting Section 5 of the Public Order Act 1986 which refers to language "deemed to cause harassment, alarm or distress".http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/leicestershire/5135150.stmCommentators have made comparisons with the Sex
Pistols case, pointing to some of the statements made by the
defence barrister, John
Mortimer QC:
"What sort of country are we living in if a politician comes to
Nottingham and
speaks here to a group of people in the city centre and during his
speech a heckler replies 'bollocks'. Are we to expect this person
to be incarcerated, or do we live in a country where we are proud
of our Anglo
Saxon language?"
Not current in American English
Because the word "bollocks" is not generally understood in American English, it was used by one of the subjects in the 2004 reality television programme Brat Camp, in which troubled British and American teenagers were sent to an American wilderness reformation camp in the desert of central Oregon. The participants were forbidden by the camp rules from swearing, but since the supervisors did not recognize the term "bollocks" as a swearword, one member was able to use it with impunity to relieve his frustration. The programme included a brief segment in which he begged the (British) camera crew not to reveal the meaning of the word to the camp supervisors.Also in the American medical drama series
ER,
British character Neela Rasgotra (played by British actress
Parminder
Nagra) has frequently used the word - presumably as a way for
the writers deliberately to sneak an offensive word past censors
into mainstream television.
Longer usage
Sometimes bollocks is combined with an abbreviated version of the original statement, e.g.:- "It was your fault." - "Bollocks it was!" (It certainly was not.)
- "Did Derby win last night?" - "Did they bollocks!" (No, they didn't.)
Talking bollocks
Talking nonsense or even bullshit, for example, "Don't listen to him, he's talking bollocks, " or, "talking pure bollocks."Bollockspeak
"Talking bollocks" in a corporate context is referred to as bollockspeak. Bollockspeak tends to be buzzword-laden and largely content-free. "Rupert, we'll have to leverage our synergies to facilitate a paradigm shift by Q4" is an example of management bollockspeak. There is a whole parodic book entitled The Little Book of Management Bollocks.Testiculate (verb)
The act of talking bollocks whilst waving one's arms about wildly (i.e. gesticulating) is referred to as testiculation. Possibly attributable to the BBC Radio 4 comedy programme "I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue".A bollocks
Comparable to cock-up, screw up, balls-up, etc. Used with the indefinite article it means a disaster, a mess, a failure. It is often used pejoratively, as in "You made a bollocks out of that one, sunshine!". It is used throughout Ireland and perhaps more frequently in the northern regions of the United Kingdom.Bollocks (transitive verb)
To bollocks something up means "to mess something up". Alternatively, one can make a right bollocks of it. It refers to a botched job: "Well, you bollocksed it up that time, Your Majesty!" or "I'm sorry I'm so late. Bollocksed up at work again, I fear. Millions down the drain."To drop a bollock
To drop a bollock describes the malfunction of an operation, or messing something up - as in many sports, and in more polite business parlance, dropping the ball brings play to an unscheduled halt. It has not been unknown in some instances for the phrase to be used to highlight extreme anger. The phrase has even seen use in the literal sense when a male suffers injury to the scrotum.Bollocks dropping is also used more
physiologically to refer to male adolescence, especially when
concerned with the changes to his voice e.g. "How can he sing so
high?" "Easy, his bollocks haven't dropped yet."
More recently the term has been used to describe
disbelief, e.g. "He nearly dropped a bollock when he found out."
"The manager would drop a bollock if he knew."
A bollocking
Bollocking usually refers to a strong verbal chastisement for something one has done incorrectly. i.e. "I didn't do my homework and got a right bollocking off Mr Smith" or "A nurse was assisting at an appendix operation when, apparently, she shouldn't have been doing so...and the surgeon got a bollocking". The term is used frequently in the British Army recruitment process where it is mutually understood that "if you err then you will get bollocked or get a bollocking" —in most cases, these bollockings will be without physical contact but will be a psychological assault on a person's character, look or actions.Originally, a bollocking was a serious assault,
and the term comes from the bollock
dagger, popular between the 13th and 18th centuries.
Rollocking is sometimes used as a euphemism
"bollocking" (not to be confused with rowlocks, devices used in rowing
a boat).
Bollocking (adjective)
Bollocking can also be used as a reinforcing adjective: "He hasn't a bollocking clue!" or "Where's me bollocking car?"A kick in the bollocks
"A kick in the bollocks" is used to describe a significant set-back or disappointment.Dog's Bollock Syndrome
Dog's Bollock Syndrome can be used to describe an excessive use of technology or visual aid, such as in an enormous use of Flash animations on a website. It is derived from the question: "Why do dogs lick their bollocks?" (answer: "Because they can"). In a technological context, the question could be "Why has the web developer included a three-minute animated intro to this page?", prompting the answer: "Dog's Bollock Syndrome, mate. Because he can".Up to one's bollocks
This phrase can be used if one is overwhelmed with a substance or chore. Eg: "Can you help me out, Henry? I'm up to my bollocks in paperwork!" Or: "The wife over-watered the flowerbeds again; now I'm up to my bollocks in petunias!" It is a vulgarism for the more usual "up to one's eyes in something".Bollock cold and freeze one's bollocks off
The scrotum's purpose is to keep testicles a couple of degrees cooler than the rest of the body. However, bollock cold actually means very cold indeed. "It's bollock cold outside - it's enough to freeze the balls off a brass monkey".Work one's bollocks off
Both icy weather and hard work run the risk of orchidectomy: "Fred worked his bollocks off on that last project". This phrase is sometimes used by and about women. Lee Ryan from the Blue (boy band) refers to his mother having "worked her bollocks off" to help his early career. http://www.officialleeryan.com/biography.html ) In this context, one can also work one's bollocks "to the bone".Bollock naked
Used in singular form to describe being in the nude: "he was completely pissed and stark bollock naked". Bollocky is Australian slang for "naked"; in the bollocky-buff is naval slang for the same. However, bollock naked is naval slang for spaghetti bolognese.Bollocks (singular noun)
In Ireland, "bollocks" or "bollox" can be used as a singular noun to mean a despicable or notorious person: eg "Who's the old ballocks you were talking to?", or conversely as a very informal term of endearment: "Ah Ted, ye big bollocks, let's go have a pint!"Bollocksed
Multiple meanings. Also spelled "bolloxed":- exhausted: "I couldn't sleep at all last night; I'm completely bollocksed!"
- broken: "My foot pump is bollocksed."
- an extreme state of inebriation or drug imbibement: "Last night I got completely bollocksed."
- the after-effects of such activity : "I drank two bottles of gin last night, I'm completely bollocksed."
Positive uses
Dog's bollocks
A usage with a positive sense is the dog's bollocks. An example of this usage is "Before Tony Blair's speech, a chap near me growled: ‘'E thinks 'e's the dog's bollocks.’ Well he's entitled to. It was a commanding speech: a real dog's bollocks of an oration." Sometimes the phrase is shortened to just "the dog's" or "the bollocks" and can be substituted with "The Poodle's Privates" or "mutt's nuts" (see below).Although this is a recent term (the Online
Etymology Dictionary dates it to 1989), its origins are obscure:
- etymologist Eric Partridge and the BBC believe the term comes from the printers' mark of a colon and a dash;
- another theory suggests it is a spoonerism of 1950's Meccano sets called "box, deluxe", in much the same way that their "box, standard" set name was corrupted to "bog standard", although this etymology is anything but certain.
- "The dog's bollocks" fits in with several rhyming reduplications of positive meaning that were popular during the 1920s ("the bee's knees," "the cat's pajamas"). More recent expressions that follow the same pattern are "the mutt's nuts" or "the dog's danglies".
There is also a beer brewed in England by the
Wychwood
Brewery called the Dogs Bollocks, as well as a lager cocktail.
There is an Australian political blog called
The Dogs Bollocks
with the motto 'Truth is like a dog’s bollocks - pretty obvious if
you care to look – but most of us prefer to avert our gaze, or have
them permanently removed.'
Furthermore, fans of Chelsea F.C.
are known to refer to players Michael
Ballack and Didier
Drogba as "The Drog's Ballacks," an obvious word-play.
Derrivative accolades include the mutt's nuts and
the hound's rounds.
The bollocks
The bollocks — and the definite article is important here — can be used to mean something good when one is talking about a person or object: "My new car is the bollocks!" or "That new chef down the road, she's the bollocks!". Non-native speakers of British English should exercise extreme caution when using the term in this manner. The antonymic property of bollocks and the [dog's] bollocks is often used in humour, such as in the film The 51st State.Top bollock
Top bollock is used as a superlative, for example: "This beer is top bollock".Top bollocks
Used in the plural, top bollocks can be a slang term for women's breasts: "Look at Suzanne's top bollocks - you don't get many of those to the pound." It is also known to be used to refer to authority figures or those in power, particularly by office workers, e.g. "I have to do this, it's an order from the Top Bollocks".Chuffed to one's bollocks
The phrase chuffed to one's bollocks describes someone who is very pleased with himself. Nobel laureate Harold Pinter uses this in The Homecoming The phrase provided a serious challenge to translators of his work. Pinter used a similar phrase in an open letter, published in The Guardian, and addressed to Prime Minister Tony Blair, attacking his co-operation with American foreign policy. The letter ends by saying "Oh, by the way, meant to mention, forgot to tell you, we were all chuffed to the bollocks when Labour won the election".Euphemisms
Although the term "bollocks" is far more widely accepted than it was at the time of the Sex Pistols trial, there are occasions when an alternative phrase is required, either for reasons of decorum or to thwart an overzealous mail filter.Rhyming slang
The Cockney rhyming slang for bollocks is "Jackson Pollocks". It can be shortened to Jackson's, as in "Modern art? Pile of Jacksons if you ask me!". Sandra Bullocks is occasionally used to approximate rhyming slang -- it does not quite rhyme, but preserves meter and rhythm. The Beautiful South bowdlerised their original line "sweaty bollocks" as "Sandra Bullocks" as one of several changes to make their song "Don't Marry Her" acceptable for mainstream radio play.Spoonerisms
The spoonerism Bonkey Dollocks is a term of endearment for a well-endowed male. The bonkey's dollocks can be used as a synonym for "the dog's bollocks", as can the bog's dollocks. Another popular spoonerism is Betty Swollocks (also Swallox or Swallocks). "It ain't half hot and humid in Kuala Lumpur, mum - I've got a bad case of betty swollocks". This can be shortened to simply "The Betties".Interjections
Various euphemisms have developed to substitute for "bollocks" in the sense of "nonsense" or "mess" or as an expletive.Balderdash
Balderdash has a long, anorchid pedigree going back centuries, but sounds as though it ought to be a profanity: "With all due respect, Brian, you're talking balderdash". It is half of the title of the BBC etymology programme, in conjunction with the OED, Balderdash and Piffle.Horlicks
The term "Horlicks" was brought to prominence in July 2003 when Foreign Secretary Jack Straw used it to describe irregularities in the preparation and provenance of the "dodgy dossier" regarding weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Straw used the expression "a complete Horlicks", instead of the less polite "make a complete bollocks of something". This euphemism stems from an advertising campaign for the Horlicks malt drink, where people were seen to be shouting "Horlicks!" in a loud voice to give vent to stress or frustration. Eric Morecambe was also known to cough Horlicks! behind his hand on The Morecambe and Wise Show.Bullocks
In the movie The Devil Wears Prada, Emily, the snooty assistant to the fashion editor, uses the term "bullocks" as an expletive when informed of her impending removal from the Paris team.Gonads
Other words are direct substitutions for "bollocks" in the sense of "testicles".Nadgers
Nadgers is one of many words dripping with sexual innuendo that emerged in the 1950s and 60s to evade strict BBC censorship. The etymology is uncertain, but possibly based on "gonad". When Rambling Syd Rumpo on the radio show Round the Horne asked "What shall we do with a drunken nurker?", the answer he gave was "Hit him in the nadgers with the bosun's plunger...till his bodgers dangle" The badger's nadgers can be used as a rhyming substitute for the phrase the dog's bollocks.Ballbags
Ballbags was popularised by the English comedian Russell Brand, on his television show Big Brother's Big Mouth. Over the course of series 7, they gradually developed their own personalities with one of them as the "younger, shyer bag", and the other as the "older, more confident bag". They featured in various escapades throughout series 7, but were then replaced by some "dicksacks". Brand also used ballbags as an all-purpose expletive, as bollocks may have been considered too rude for the audience demographic that Channel 4 was trying to attract.Humour
There is a strand of English humour which uses words that sound similar to 'bollocks', or other slang words for testicles, for comic effect. A good example would be "In Sarajevo in 1914, Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria was shot in the Balkans". In Richard E Grant's memoir With Nails, the actor tells of going to the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles. He notes that this is the place where "Robert Kennedy was shot in the kitchens. Sorry - 'kitchens' sounds like a euphemism for 'bollocks'. He was killed here."Another joke plays on a double
meaning: "I was in the shoe-menders today- and I got kicked in
the cobblers".
Ballock knife
There is a type of late-medieval dagger that is known to weapon and armour specialists as a "ballock knife" or "ballock-hafted knife". This dagger has a pair of symmetrical oval swellings located on each side of the hilt at the guard and clearly resembling male genitalia. An example can be found in the Wallace Collection in central London and is depicted in the museum's official catalogue.Other uses
Bollock head is a British term for a shaven head. It can also refer to someone who is stupid, as can bollock brain. The Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue (1811) cites the expression "His brains are in his ballocks" to designate a fool.Bollock chops describes someone with a round
face. Bollock breath is a general term of abuse, likely for a
person suffering from halitosis. Bollock buster
refers to any very heavy item, especially one that may cause a
hernia.
Bollocked describes the period during which a
painful sensation is experienced by virtue of the testicles being
violently assaulted e.g. by a football or deliberate assault.
Usage: "The ball caught me right up the nads and I was bollocked
for a good 5 minutes"
On the Internet, "bollocks" is sometimes
synonymous with "miscellaneous" in some blogs. It is used to list
stories that do not fit in any other particular category (See
Threadwatch).