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  1. colloquial. Excellent, fantastic. Frequently no more than an allusion to activities or characteristics associated with a particular type of person, esp. a type of Londoner. 1992. To protect the naive, it has been necessary to translate from the original lovely-jubbly North London patois.

  2. Oct 5, 2024 · Based on the 1950s slogan “lubbly Jubbly” advertising Jubbly, an orange-flavoured soft drink. The modified version was coined by the English television scriptwriter John Sullivan (1946–2011) as an expression generally used by the character Derek “Del Boy” Trotter, a market trader from London, in the BBC television comedy Only Fools ...

  3. Lovely-jubbly definition: (UK, colloquial) Lovely ; great , fantastic . Origin of Lovely-jubbly From an advertising slogan for Jubbly, an orange-flavoured soft drink.

  4. Dictionary entries. Entries where "lovely jubbly" occurs: jubbly: jubbly (English) Noun jubbly (pl. jubblies) (slang) female breast See also lovely jubbly. easy peasy: see also easy-peasy‎ easy peasy (English) Alternative forms easy peasey easy-peasey easy-peasy Adjective easy peasy (childish) Very easy, simple Now now Benny Wenny, don’t cry about it, learning how to add fractions is easy ...

  5. Feb 7, 2021 · The origin of 'Lovely Jubbly'. It is impossible to know exactly where Only Fools and Horse's writer John Sullivan picked up the phrase but it is pretty much universally accepted that the origins lie in an advert around the 1950s and 60s. The Jubbly was actually an orange flavoured drink which could also be frozen and eaten as an ice lolly.

    • Ian Molyneaux
  6. For example, a suggestion of fish and chips for supper could evoke the response, “Lovely jubbly!”. The expression derives from the advertising slogan for an orange drink called Jubbly which was popular in the 1950s and 1960s and which was often sold in frozen form. Lovely Jubbly can also refer to money or winnings depending on the context.

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  8. Lovely jubbly. Notice the pronunciation, 'lovely jubbly'. There is a kind of resonance there, a rhyming resonance, which is part of the attraction of the phrase. It's a jocular exclamation. It ...

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