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rhyming slang

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froggo | 11:11 Fri 23rd Jun 2006 | Phrases & Sayings
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does anyone know wher the relevance of a watch being called a kettle in cockney rhyming slang?
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'Kettle and hob' = watch and fob. (Source: The Cockney Rhyming Slang Dictionary) http://www.aldertons.com and click on English-Slang.
Question Author
okay but why apples and pairs obviously pairs rhyme with stairs but what relevance?
Apples and pears - not pairs! ie. two fruits.

If you're looking for relevance between the phrase and the meaning there rarely is one in rhyming slang.
There is no relevance, it's deliberately like that. It's just phrases that rhyme.

Right I'm off up the frog and toad for a clap and cheer in the old rubba dub dub.
And after that he's going home for some jockeys whips then up the apple & pears.
according to my book " up the frog " 1969 priced at 5 shillings, watch is gordon n gotch.
"Apples and pears/stairs" may have something to do with the way the fruit were presented in a costermonger's barrow (ie, in a tiered fashion).

"Kettle and hob/ watch and fob" - (another guess) for every kettle there was a hob, and for every watch (pocket-watch), a fob. Or may have something to do with the size of the watches available then.

No doubt, rhyming slang is still evolving.
Question Author
what about the different terms for money ie:
pony
monkey
jacks etc

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