The meanings vary over time and depend on context. This is why even intelligent people have trouble working out what politicians are actually trying to say:
fish girl
horse boyfriend/husband
shark investor
beef celebrity
cat wannabe CEO
fat cat successful CEO
dog girl?
rhino old investor
rhino horn old investor sex drive
elephant old husband
star wars recession
butterfly queen
plebs politicians/ plebians
light truth
tiger asia
moon woman
sun credit flow
coffee waking up to the truth
zombies not knowing the truth
apocalypse banks stop lending. World runs on debt
apple knowledge
dinosaur old aristocrat
alien aristocrat bred from annunaki
crocodile aristocrat
bear pessimist
bull optimist
dance swap between different ideological investors
sing tell the truth
fire trouble
wolf single girl
panda person seeing things black and white
sheep general public
muggle general public
slytherin aristocrats
bees startup ceos
pesticide bullying through fear
good bad
bad good
rock unmoveable person
no yes
to be honest… I’m lying
has full backing they’re fired
yes no
definitely maybe
duck ?
dolphin girl?
whale older rich wife?
heat threatening to tell the truth
iron man a movie
… stuff left unsaid, said as a long pause with staring eyes. Like a constipated psychopath
Pi economic circle/cycle
mars system of regular wars/god of war
venus women
blue sex
WMD lies
defence murder
peace war planning
gravity fear
chattel slaves
asteroid fallen startup
star celebrity
comet unmarried startup
singers philosophers
bread money
LOL laugh out loud/lots of luv
frog french
coding rhetoric
rabbits single people (unlike married people they have sex occasionally!)
sunscreen buy gold
media circus the news
concrete jungle the City
leverage government taxes
u-turn final decision
legacy “Too many twits make a…” – David Cameron (mistake or script?)
omnishambles I have no constructive ideas
For anyone that has been offended by what they have just read I suggest they refer to George Orwell’s essay: ‘Politics and the English Language’ (1946) or to ‘dog-whistle politics’ on wikipedia.