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      • Lovely jubbly British informal expression that denotes great enthusiasm or approval for something or other dates from the 1970s when it was made famous in the British TV series Fools and Horses in which it was often used by Del boy, the character played by David Jason.
      idiomorigins.org/origin/lovely-jubbly
  1. Oct 5, 2024 · lovely jubbly (comparative more lovely jubbly, superlative most lovely jubbly) (British, informal) Lovely; fantastic, great. Synonyms: see Thesaurus: wonderful.

  2. 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.

    • Ian Molyneaux
  3. British English colloquial and slang. lovely jubbly, int., n., & adj. meanings, etymology, pronunciation and more in the Oxford English Dictionary.

  4. (British, colloquial) Lovely; great, fantastic. 2000, Anna Maxted, Getting Over It. "Yeah?" says Adam, who doubtless expected me to put up a fight. " Lovely jubbly! It's a date!" "No, it isn't," I say. 2000, Roger Granelli, Status Zero. "Fucking lovely jubbly this, innit?" Duane said.

  5. Mar 8, 2021 · Lovely Jubbly This soon became one of Del Boy’s famous catchphrases, and was supposedly borrowed from an advertising slogan for Jubbly Orange Drink, sold in a pyramid-shaped paper carton. Sullivan had remembered it and thought it would be a suitable expression for Del Boy to use.

  6. Lovely jubbly. British informal expression that denotes great enthusiasm or approval for something or other dates from the 1970s when it was made famous in the British TV series Fools and Horses in which it was often used by Del boy, the character played by David Jason.

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  8. Nov 25, 2022 · Anyone who's watched Only Fools will recognise the catchphrase 'lovely jubbly' Del uses when he's happy about something, and may even have used it themselves a few times. Well this particular turn of phrase actually traces back to an advert for ice lollies.

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