CHOCKA

CHOCKA

Adjective | Fullness / Abundance

Encyclopedia of British Slang

CHOCKA

Adjective | Neutral | Fullness / Abundance

CHOCKA Pronunciation: /’t??k-?/ Part of Speech: Adjective Severity Level: Neutral Category: Fullness / Abundance

Core Definition

Chocka (short for chock-a-block) means:

Completely full

Packed

Overcrowded

Filled to capacity

It implies no space remaining.

Linguistic Origins

Derived from chock-a-block, originally a nautical term describing pulleys pulled tight together.

The shortened form chocka became popular in informal speech.

Usage Contexts

Transport:

Trains chocka.

Schedule:

Diarys chocka.

Room:

Its chocka in here.

It signals saturation.

Emotional Register

Chocka is energetic.

It can imply excitement or frustration.

Depending on context.

Tone Variations

Excited:

Chocka tonight!

Complaining:

Absolutely chocka.

Neutral:

Bit chocka.

Tone directs mood.

Comparison with Related Terms

Packed neutral

Rammo crowded

Full simple

Chocka emphatic fullness

Chocka feels informal.

Psychological Function

Chocka communicates overload quickly.

It expresses abundance without precision.

Cultural Insight

Chocka reflects Britains fondness for compressed idioms.

Long phrase shortened.

Meaning preserved.

Final Assessment

Chocka is:

Abundance-focused

Informal

Efficient

Widely used

It captures fullness.

To the brim.

Chocka.

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CODSWALLOP (nonsense descriptor)

NICK (theft & prison slang nuance)

TWONK (strong insult evolution)

The volume is becoming substantial.

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Excellent. We continue into nonsense, theft slang, and a sharp but comic insult.

EXPANDED ENTRY 143

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