Dictionary of Obsolete and Provincial English: Containing Words from the English Writers Previous to the Nineteenth Century which are No Longer in Use, Or are Not Used in the Same Sense. And Words which are Now Used Only in the Provincial Dialects, Volume 2 |
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Page 494
... things . I have seen you gleeking and galling at this gentleman twice or thrice . Hen . V , v , 1 . ( 3 ) s . A sore place ; a fault . Stronglie they stop up al goon - hole galls . Heywood's Spider and Flie , 1556 . ( 4 ) v . To ...
... things . I have seen you gleeking and galling at this gentleman twice or thrice . Hen . V , v , 1 . ( 3 ) s . A sore place ; a fault . Stronglie they stop up al goon - hole galls . Heywood's Spider and Flie , 1556 . ( 4 ) v . To ...
Page 502
... thing or person . Gearment , Yorksh . GEARING - RAILS , 8. The ladder- like rails at the side of a cart . Northampt . GEARS , S. Horse trappings . GEARUM , adv . Out of order . Lanc . GEASON , adj . Scarce ; rare . See Geson . Fayre is ...
... thing or person . Gearment , Yorksh . GEARING - RAILS , 8. The ladder- like rails at the side of a cart . Northampt . GEARS , S. Horse trappings . GEARUM , adv . Out of order . Lanc . GEASON , adj . Scarce ; rare . See Geson . Fayre is ...
Page 506
... thing . No sight to be seene , but she must view it ; not a gewgaw to be heard of but she must have it . Man in the Moone , 1609 . You may fancy castles , And forty I know not what's , but they're of snow , Come one good showre , and ...
... thing . No sight to be seene , but she must view it ; not a gewgaw to be heard of but she must have it . Man in the Moone , 1609 . You may fancy castles , And forty I know not what's , but they're of snow , Come one good showre , and ...
Page 512
... thing . Devon . GITE , S. ( 1 ) A gown . Chaucer . Thy brodred gyte makes thee a gallant gyrle . Turberville's Ep . & Son . , 1569 . When Phoebus rose he left his golden weed , And donn'd a gite in deepest purple dy'd . Fairf . , Tasso ...
... thing . Devon . GITE , S. ( 1 ) A gown . Chaucer . Thy brodred gyte makes thee a gallant gyrle . Turberville's Ep . & Son . , 1569 . When Phoebus rose he left his golden weed , And donn'd a gite in deepest purple dy'd . Fairf . , Tasso ...
Page 517
... thing . Norf . GNAT - SNAPPER , S. ( 1 ) The name of a bird , also called a fig - pecker . ( 2 ) A fool . Urquhart's Rabelais . GNATT , 8. The bird called a knot ( tringa Canutus ) . GNATTER , v . To grumble ; to gnaw . North . GNATTERY ...
... thing . Norf . GNAT - SNAPPER , S. ( 1 ) The name of a bird , also called a fig - pecker . ( 2 ) A fool . Urquhart's Rabelais . GNATT , 8. The bird called a knot ( tringa Canutus ) . GNATTER , v . To grumble ; to gnaw . North . GNATTERY ...
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Common terms and phrases
15th cent ampt apple applied armour beat Berks bird blow boil bread called cattle cheat Chesh cloth coarse cookery corn Cornw Country Wife Craven Cumb Derb Devon dish Dorset doth Drayt dress drink East erth Essex Exmoor fellow fish Florio fool Forme of Cury Futuere game at cards Glouc grass ground Hampsh hath hawk head hedge Heref hole horse iron Jons Kent kind Knave Lanc land Leic Linc liquor meat Nomencl Norf North Northampt Northumb old cant term old name Oxfd Palsgr person plant play plough prep pret pron Pudendum Shakesp sheep Shoreham Shropsh simpleton Somers Somerset sort South Spens stone straw Suff Suffolk Suss Sussex Terence in English thee thou titmouse tree uptack walk Warner's Albions England Warw weeping cross West Wight wild William de Shoreham Wilts wine woman wooden Yorksh young
Popular passages
Page 534 - Here Mr. Jackson smiled once more upon the company; and, applying his left thumb to the tip of his nose, worked a visionary coffee-mill with his right hand, thereby performing a very graceful piece of pantomime (then much in vogue,
Page 493 - on Mayday, making a procession to this hill with May gads, as they call them, in their hands : this is a white willow wand, the bark peeled off, tied round with cowslips, a thyrsus of the Bacchanals : at night they have a bonfire and other merriment, which is really a sacrifice or religious festival.
Page 852 - Come, come, man, you must e'en fall to visiting our wives, eating at our tables, drinking tea with our virtuous relations after dinner, dealing cards to 'em, reading plays and gazets to 'em, picking fleas out of their shocks for 'em, collecting receipts, new songs, women, pages, and footmen for 'em.
Page 970 - But in the plays which have been wrote of late, there is no such thing as perfect character, but the two chief persons are most commonly a swearing, drinking, whoring ruffian for a
Page 723 - A game wherein a round box bowle is with a mallet strucke through a high arch of yron (standing at either end of an ally one) which he that can do at the fewest blowes, or at the number agreed on, winnes.
Page 493 - And, come, I will go get a leaf of brass. And with a gad of steel will write these words. And lay it by.
Page 579 - The three-hoop' d pot shall have ten hoops ; and I will make it felony to drink small beer.
Page 819 - good and hot; let the cream cool a little before you put it into the sack; then stir all together over the coals, till it be as thick as you would have it ; if you take some amber and musk, and grind it small with sugar, and strew it on the top
Page 571 - cloath or a piece of a boulter over the mouth of the bottle, and let so much run through as you will drink at that time, keeping the rest close, for so it will keep both the spirit, odor, and virtue of the wine and spices.
Page 693 - that loves an inch of raw mutton, better than an ell of Friday [or fried] stockfish; and the first letter of my name begins with