Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
It is now ten years since the Sloane Ranger Diary.
Charlie had a liking for the girls: high-class Sloane Rangers.
Something of a 'Sloane ranger', she had been the secretary/personal assistant to the director of a large insurance company.
'She has always been seen as a typical Sloane Ranger.
"It's shopping, not partying, that distinguishes a Sloane Ranger."
Other new words which might sound familiar include sloane ranger, Rambo, kissogram and decaf.
The Sloane Rangers would just die!"
Other first-time entries include palimony, kissogram and sloane ranger.
Accent noticeably identifies and separates the Sloane Ranger from the non-Sloane.
The French equivalent of Sloane Rangers, but older.'
Some of the other girls had done cordon-bleu courses - the essential Sloane Ranger qualification in those days.
Remember Sloane Rangers?
Maybe she was just a self-absorbed Sloane Ranger who found herself in a painful situation and did the best she could to improve herself.
The speakers of Sloaney are sometimes defined Sloane Rangers.
Calling on historical precedent, he expands the prologue to include a group of contemporary Sloane Rangers who find Sly passed out in the street.
"But the Sloane Ranger aspect in them often overwhelms the more decorous behavior that royal rank should dictate, and the result is not always dignified."
Kanga quickly became a favourite of the Sloane Ranger set, and resultantly became a successful international business.
In 1982 the Duchess of Cambridge was born and the 'Sloane Ranger Handbook' published.
Three decades later, the elite, cashmere-clad young women of Sloane Square in London became known as the Sloane rangers.
By the end of the 1980s, they were synonymous with the much caricatured figures of The Sloane Ranger Handbook.
The characteristics of a rah are similar to those of the Sloane Ranger stereotype also recognised in the UK.
New Romantics, Yuppies, Sloane Rangers.
("Sloane Rangers" are swinging single women who frequent the area of London's Sloane Square.)
The three formed the Sloane Rangers a seminal indie art-rock band that was a fixture in the New York rock scene for nearly a decade.
In the early 1980s, it lent its name to the "Sloane Rangers", the young underemployed, often snooty and ostentatiously well-off members of the upper classes.