Stroke : noun (Noun denoting a quick operation).
Have a drink: drink a glass of wine, alcohol, etc.); to pay a shot: to offer a drink;
Kick yourself: amount of liquid absorbed at one time.
To have a blow: to be drunk; drunk.
A shot of white or a shot of red: a glass of White wine or a glass of Red wine.
Put a blow on the grindstone: offer a tour, have the glasses filled.
Stroke from the bottle: flushing of the face, bloodstroke caused by drunkenness.
Coup de cachet: Formerly, stabbing.
Starting shot: glass we drink before leaving.
Middle shot: glass of alcohol taken in the middle of the meal.
Beforehand: large glass of alcohol taken before a meal.
Next step: half a glass of pure wine after the soup.
Watering can: glass of wine drunk on the bar of the innkeeper (agot des faubouriens).
Coup de casserole: denunciation (thieves' slang).
Lemon shot: head shot.
Cow kick: semi-circular kick, kick.
Spoon to pot: punch.
Fork stroke: finger shot in the eye. This very dangerous move is peculiar to thugs. It consists of wearing the middle finger and index finger of one or the other hand in the eyes of the opponent, spread out in a V-shape.
Forklift: lunch (bourgeois slang). Give a fork. To eat.
Fork stroke: flight using only two fingers.
Napkin blow: bellows, small slap.
Coup de torchon: Kiss, in the slang of the faubouriens, who no doubt want to talk about those that are given to women with make-up, whose lips then wipe their faces.
Whiplash: fierce blow on the back of the neck that thugs sometimes give each other in their fights.
Blow of gas: blow of wine (slang of the faubouriens).
Syrup shot: slight intoxication, after drinking wine as sickening as syrup; after sipping too much.
Sunburn: having drunk too much of the little Burgundy. We also say a shot of syrup.