Cockney Rhyming Slang
Utilisé surtout dans l'est de Londres.
E.g:Wikipedia wrote:Rhyming slang works by replacing the word to be obscured with the first word of a phrase that rhymes with that word. For instance, "face" would be replaced by "boat", because face rhymes with "boat race". Similarly "feet" becomes "plates" ("plates of meat"), and "money" is "bread" (a very common usage, from "bread and honey"). Sometimes the full phrase is used, for example "Currant Bun" to mean The Sun, usually referring to the British tabloid newspaper of that name. There is no hard and fast rule for this, and you just have to know whether a particular expression is always shortened, never shortened, or can be used either way.
Apples = apples and pears = stairs (escalier) — "Get up them apples!"
Barnet = Barnet Fair = hair (cheveux / poil) — "What´s a matter with yer Barnet."
Frog = frog and toad = road (route) — "I was crossing the frog..."
Rosie = Rosie Lee = tea (thé) — "'ave a cup of rosie."
D'autres :
Dog and bone = phone (téléphone)
Trouble and strife = wife (femme)
Barney Rubble = trouble
Rhyming slang est souvent utilisé comme euphamisme :
Berkshire hunt = ** = aujourd'hui berk (andouille)
Cobblers awls = balls = aujourd'hui cobblers (betises)
Tom tit = sh**
Jimmy Riddle = piddle (pipi) = Jimmy
Raspberry ripple = nipple
Raspberry tart = fart

il y a aussi "Australian Rhyming slang"
ET
Backslang / Pig latin
Première lettre du mot => fin du mot + "-ay" (e.g. dog = ogday)
2 lettres qui font 1 son sont traitées comme 1 lettre (e.g. this = isthay)
Pour les mots commençant avec des voyels, faut juste ajouter "-ay" (e.g. open = openay)
Even some english people can't speak pig latin
==> Evenay omesay englishay eoplepay an'tcay eakspay igpay atinlay
2 mots Pig Latin maintenant en la langue anglaise : amscray (scram, filez), ixnay (nix, non. Utilisé comme impéritif : Ixnay on the "ishfay", i.e. Don't talk about fish)
Alors, après tout ça, y'a-t-il qqch de semblable en d'autres langues? (En français je connais verlan et javanais) Et si oui, comment est-ce qu'on le parle?
Merci
