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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsWhat does grass mean, in term of cooperating with the police? British usage
I am reading The most recent Thursday Murder Club and there are a father and son with blemishes as far as the police is concerned and when asked about some crime they do not grass.
Similar to snitch?
Srkdqltr
(9,944 posts)question everything
(52,410 posts)Bristlecone
(11,191 posts)It means to help the authorities by ratting out someone
Its always a criminal snitching on a criminal in the cases I reference. Often considered going against their moral code.
question everything
(52,410 posts)dweller
(28,708 posts)to the peelers
✌🏻
bucolic_frolic
(55,844 posts)Figarosmom
(13,427 posts)Don't fuck me over.
stopdiggin
(15,643 posts)and in my reading and understanding, it remains fairly specific to that.
Figarosmom
(13,427 posts)Don't grass me up. And it's a cop talking to an informant or in interview rooms.
And I took it for telling them not to lie or mess around wasting their time.
stopdiggin
(15,643 posts)and in my hearing 'grass' almost invariably means to inform or 'snitch' - or alternatively the informer or snitch.
but if that's the way you heard it - so be it.
language is a moving target. yes?
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Figarosmom
(13,427 posts)Eugene
(67,326 posts)And then there's a "supergrass," lower than a snake in the grass,
an informant during The Troubles.
msongs
(74,206 posts)
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