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local. Gangs criminal activities, black market 13. 1950s – jazz music; modern, trad and skiffle. Rock and roll music – Teddy Boys i.e. New Edwardians; Teddy Girls Meetings in coffee bars. Trad kids listened to traditional jazz 2nd grouping – modern jazz 3rd movement – skiffle – mix of jazz, folk&blues, improvised instruments Teddy Boys rocknroll, inspired by the Edwardian era. Teddy Girswore girly things, rocknroll, working class, fought class society. 14. 1960s – mods and rockers. MODS Origin on name modern or modernists(to describe modern jazz musicians and fans). Their interests Focused on music(jazz) and fashion other characteristics drug use, scooters ROCKERS The rockers were centred on rock’n’roll music and motorcycling, so they also wore
computes to lounge. Hey, that makes sense. One lounges in a chair that lets you put your feet up. Now many lawn furniture departments advertise “chaise lounges.” 16. Archaisms A word or phrase (or a particular meaning of a word or phrase) that is considered extremely old fashioned and long out of common use. 19th-Century Archaisms "We do not have to go back as far as Elizabethan English or the Middle Ages to encounter archaisms. Here are some from the Victorian and Edwardian eras: beastly (as in 'so beastly critical') blest, deuced (if I know) guv’nor luncheon spiffing 20th-Century Archaisms "Among the technological archaisms I've had to explain to the Tuned In children--what a 'record' is, why they call it 'dialing' a phone, the fact that, once, you couldn't rewind TV shows--is the fact that, a long time ago, musicians used to make little movies of their songs, and people would watch them on TV." 17. Neologisms