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Plonker

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hal | 13:26 Thu 19th Jun 2003 | Phrases & Sayings
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origins of 'plonker' in its vulgar usage?
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my cousin used to tell me that it is a donkeys whatsit!
In its more 'kindly' use, meaning 'idiot' - as in 'Only Fools and Horses' later - it did not appear until the mid 1960s. I often wondered whether Del-Boy's script-writers meant it as a variant of 'plunger'...after all, he did often call Rodney a 'dipstick', too.

There is little doubt how 'dipstick' came to have a crude meaning, apart from the rhyming element. (I need to be circumspect here, I suppose.) You need think only of the function of that device in a car's engine to see what anatomical part it is a synonym for and most nicknames for that are also used to mean 'idiot'.

QM: re 'dipstick'. I'm still trying top work out which part of the body has two lines on it to show 'high' and 'low'. Any clues ?
You could have them tattooed on, Fred. They might make an interesting conversation-piece for one's lady-friends! I'm reminded, however, of the Billy Connolly story in which he planned to have a rudely-dismissive two-word phrase tattooed on his anatomy for the benefit of men getting too close in public conveniences. Sadly, though, he found there wasn't enough space! Cheers
Just out of interest, according to the 1968 UK film All Neat in Black Stockings the term plonker originally referred to a man who shares his girlfriend with his mates. Not a very nice trait, really.
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