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Plonker
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origins of 'plonker' in its vulgar usage?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.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'.
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
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