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  1. a bunch of fives. idiom UK old-fashioned slang. Add to word list Add to word list. If you give someone a bunch of fives, you hit them hard with your hand closed. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Hitting and beating. at-risk. bang away. bang someone up.

  2. ‘A bunch of fives’ is a slang term for a fist, especially one used for punching. The fives are the four fingers and the thumb. What's the origin of the phrase 'A bunch of fives'? The phrase appears in print in 1825, in Charles Westmacott’s satirical novel The English Spy:

  3. Meaning. This phrase refers to the human fist where the bunch of fives literally point out to the five digits. It refers to boxing and how the five fingers come together for the same. Example Sentences. The two enemy groups in the college this time came together for a fight with nothing but their bunch of fives.

  4. The meaning of "a bunch of fives" " A bunch of fives " Meaning: A fist, as used in a fight. Example: Punch me would you? How’d you like a bunch of fives in your eye? Where did it originate?: The United Kingdom. Where is it used?: Mostly in the UK, but occasionally elsewhere too. Hear the idiom spoken:

  5. 23 de sept. de 2016 · 2.46K subscribers. 43. 4.4K views 7 years ago. British teen drama following fifth-formers at a comprehensive school, the pupils at Oxford Lane Comprehensive include Chris Taylor (Jamie Foreman) and...

  6. a bunch of fives n noun: Refers to person, place, thing, quality, etc. UK, slang, figurative, dated (punch) puñetazo, golpe nm nombre masculino : Sustantivo de género exclusivamente masculino, que lleva los artículos el o un en singular, y los o unos en plural.

  7. 24 May 1978. ( 1978-05-24) A Bunch of Fives is an English children's television show from ATV, broadcast for two series of seven episodes each in 1977 and 1978 on ITV. [1] A precursor of Grange Hill, [2] it starred Andrew Rinous, Lesley Manville and Jamie Foreman as fifth formers who start a school newspaper.