Alessandro Bonazzi 8c43d5cf2f Patch level : 12.00
Files correlati     : cg0.exe cg0700a.msk cg0700b.msk cg3.exe cg4.exe

Bug                 :

Commento:
Merge 1.0 libraries
2025-04-06 00:42:21 +02:00

7828 lines
220 KiB
XML

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<!DOCTYPE dict SYSTEM "dict.dtd">
<!--* complete: A B C D E F G H IJ K L M N O P Q R S T UV W X Y Z -->
<dict>
<titlepage>
<title>Canting Dictionary</title>
<p>A Collection of the Canting Words and
Terms, both ancient and modern,
used by Beggars,
Gypsies, Cheats, House-Breakers, Shop-Lifters,
Foot-Pads, Highway-Men, &c;</p>
<p>Taken from <i>The Universal Etymological English Dictionary</i>,
by N. Bailey, London, 1737, Vol. II, and
transcrib'd into XML Most Diligently by Liam Quin.</p>
<note>
<p>English spelling has evolved greatly since this
dictionary was publish'd. In the Eighteenth Century, Capital Letters
were generally used for Nouns, and the spelling of a word could vary
from one occurrence to the next. <i>Cloaths</i>, <i>Clothes</i> and
<i>Cloathes</i> all seem to have been used, for example.
You'll just have to deal with it.</p>
<p>Note also that <i>i</i> and <i>j</i> are treated as if they were the same
letter, as are <i>u</i> and <i>v</i>, so that <i>Urchin</i> appears in
the dictionary quite a way after <i>Vamp</i>, since the U is sorted as if it
were a V.</p>
</note>
</titlepage>
<letter name="a"><title>A</title>
<entry c="thing"><title>ABRAM</title>
<p>Naked, or having scarce
Cloaths enough to hide Nakedness.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>ABRAM-COVE</title>
<p>a lusty Rogue,
with hardly any Cloaths on his
Back: a Tatterdemallion.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>ABRAM-MEN</title>
<target>ABRAM-MAN</target>
<p>otherwise called
<eg>Toms of Bedlam</eg>, shabby Beggars, patched
and trick'd up with Ribbons, Red-Tape,
Fox-tails, Rags of various Colours;
pretending to be besides themselves,
to palliate their Thefts of Poultry, Linnen,
&c;
A sort of itinerant
Hedge-Robbers, and Strippers of Children, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>ACADEMY</title>
<p>a Bawdy House; a Receptacle for all sorts of Villains, where
the Young Ones are initiated in the
<eg>Canting Language</eg>, and all manner of
Cheats and Impostures, and sorted into
Tribes and Bands, according to their
several Capacities for Mischief.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>ADAM TILER</title>
<p>the Comerade of a
Pick pocket, who receives stollen
Goods or Money, and scours off with
them, <eg>Tip the coal to Adam Tiler</eg>; i.e.
give the Money, Watch, &c; to a running
Companion, that the Pick Pocket
may have nothing found upon him,
when he is apprehended.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>AFFIDAVIT-MEN</title>
<p>Knights of the
Post: mercenary and abandoned Wretches,
who used to frequent the <i>Temple</i>
and other Inns of Court, in order to be
in Readiness to swear any thing that
was proposed to them.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>ALSATIA <i>the Higher</i></title>
<title><i>White-Fryars</i></title>
<p>once a Privileged Place, as the <i>Mint</i>
was lately; but suppressed, on Account
of the notorious Abuses committed in
it.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>ALSATIA <i>the Lower</i></title>
<p>the <i>Mint</i> in <i>Southwark</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>ALSATIANS</title>
<p>the Inhabitants of
these two Places, such as broken
Tradesmen, extravagant Spendthrifts.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>ALTEMAL</title>
<p><i>Vide Dutch</i> Reckoning.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>AMBIDEXTER</title>
<p>one that goes snacks
in Gaming with both Parties; also a
<!--* col *-->
Lawyer that takes Fees of Plaintiff and
Defendant at once.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> AMUSE [in a <i>Canting sense</i>]</title>
<p>to
fling Dust in the Eyes; also to invent
strange Tales to delude Shop keepers
and others, from being upon their
Guard.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>AMUSEMENT</title>
<p>a blind, or feint.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>AMU&stress;SERS</title>
<p>who were wont to have
their Pockets filled with Dust, which
they would throw into the Eyes of
People they had a mind to rob, and so
run away, while their Comerade, who
followed them, under the Notion of
pitying the half blinded Person, laid
his Hand on whatever came next.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>ANGLERS</title><title><i>alias</i> HOOKERS</title>
<p>petty
Thieves, who have a Stick with a
Hook at the End, wherewith they
pluck Things out of Windows, Grates,
&c;
<eg>Make ready your Angling Stick</eg>; a
Word of Command used by these petty
Villains, to get ready the Stick with
which they perform their Pranks, and
as a Signal of a Prey in Sight.
In the Day-time they beg from House to
House, to spy best where to plant their
Designs, which at Night they put in
Execution.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>ANTICKS</title>
<p>such as dress themselves
up with Ribbons, mismatched Colours,
Feathers &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>ANTIQUATED</title>
<p>an old Rogue, or
one who has forgot, or left off his
Trade of thieving, is said to be.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>ARCH-ROGUE</title>
<p>the <eg>Dimber-Damber Uprightman</eg> or Chief of a Gang; as
<i>Arch-Dell</i>, or <i>Arch-Doxy</i> signifies the
same Degree in Rank among the Female
<i>Canters</i> and <i>Gypsies</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>ARK</title>
<p>a Boat or Wherry.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>ARK-RUFFIANS</title>
<p>Rogues, who in
Conjunction with Watermen, &c; rob
and sometimes murder on the Water;
by picking a Quarrel with the Passenger
and then plundering, stripping and
throwing him or her over board, &c;</p>
<p>A Species of <i>Badgers</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>ASSIG.</title>
<p>An Assignation, Appointment or Meeting</p></entry>
<!--* page 2 *-->
<entry c="bawd"><title>AUNT</title>
<p>a Bawd, or Procuress; a Title of Eminence for the <i>Senior Dells</i>,
who serve for Instructresses, Midwives,
&c;, to the <i>Morts</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>AUTEM</title>
<p>a Church; also married.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>AUTEM-BAWLER</title>
<p>a Preacher, or Parson, of any sect.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title brace="right">AUTEM-CACKLERS</title>
<title>AUTEM-PRICKEARS</title>
<p>Dissenters of any Denomination.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>AUTEM-CACKLETUB</title>
<p>a Conventicle,
a Meeting-House for Dissenters.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>AUTEM-DIPPERS</title>
<p>Anabaptists.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>AUTEM-DIVERS</title>
<p>Church-Pick-pockets;
also Church-wardens, Overseers of the Poor.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>AUTEM-GOGGLERS</title>
<p>pretended <i>French</i> Prophets.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>AUTEM-MORT</title>
<p>a marry'd Woman;
also one who travels up and
down the Country, with one Child in
their Arms, another on her Back,
and often leading a third in her Hand.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>AUTEM-QUAVERS</title>
<p><i>Quakers</i></p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>AUTEM-QUA-VERTUB</title>
<p>a <i>Quaker's</i>
Meeting-House.</p></entry>
</letter>
<letter name="b" pagesize="big"><title>B</title>
<entry c="adj"><title>BACK&stress;ED</title>
<p>dead; as <eg>He wishes the Senior backed</eg>,
i.e. <meaning>He longs to have his Father upon Six Mens Shoulders</meaning>.
<eg>His Backs up</eg>, a taunting Expression.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BACON</title>
<p>the Prize, or whatever kind
which Robbers make in their Enterprizes.
<eg>He has saved his Bacon</eg>; i.e. He
has himself escaped with the Prize,
whence it is commonly used for any
narrow Escape.
<eg>The Cove has a bien
squawl to maund Bacon</eg>; i.e. he has a
good Voice to beg Bacon; used to jeer
a bad Voice, or an indifferent Singer.
<eg>The Bacon Sweard rakes in his Throttle</eg>;
<i>i.e.</i> the Sweard of the Bacon sticks in
his Throat; used to a person who has
Hoarseness, or one, who at their Merry-Meetings, excuses himself from
Singing, on pretence of a Cold.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BADGE</title>
<p>is used in a Canting Sense,
for Burning in the Hand or Cheek (as
it used to be) as <eg>he has got his Badge and piked away</eg>;
He has been burned in the
Hand, &c; and is just set at Liberty.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BADGE-COVES</title>
<p>Parish-Pensioners</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BADGERS</title>
<p>a Crew of desperate Villains,
who rob and kill near rivers, and
then throw the dead bodies therein.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BAGGAGE</title>
<p>as the heavy Baggage,
the Children and Women who are unable
to travel fast in Gangs of Gypsies,
and Strowlers.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>BALSOM</title>
<p>Money: <eg>The Cove has secured the Balsom</eg>,
i.e. He has seized the Money.</p></entry>
<entry sortas="BAM" c="crime"><title>A BAM</title>
<p>a Sham or Cheat: a knavish
Contrivance to amuse or deceive.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BANBURY <i>story</i></title>
<p>of a Cock and a
Bull, an idle Relation, in order to pick
Acquaintance on the Road, till a convenient
Place or Opportunity offer to
rob or plunder.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BANDITTI</title>
<p>Highwaymen, Horse or
Foot, now used for Rogues of any kind,
but strictly <i>Italian</i> Rapparees.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BANDOG</title>
<p>a Bailiff or his Follower;
a Sergeant or his Yeomen.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BANTLING</title>
<p>a Child.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BARKER</title>
<p>a Salesman's Servant that
walks before the Shop, to invite customers.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BARNACLE</title>
<p>a good Job, or a Snack
easily got; so called from the Gratuity
given to Jockeys, for buying and selling
Horses.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BARNACLES</title>
<p>the Irons worn in
Goal by Felons.
A Pair of Spectacles
is also called Barnacles; as <eg>I saw the
Cuffin Quire with his Nose Barnacled,
making out the Cove's Dispatches</eg>, i.e. I
saw the Justice of Peace with his Spectacles
on making out his <i>Mittimus</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>BAR-WIG</title>
<p>between a bob and a long one.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> BASTE</title>
<p>to beat.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>BASTONADING</title>
<p>a Cudgelling</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>BATTEN</title>
<p>to fatten; to keep up a
Fowl, &c; till it is fit for eating.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BATTENER</title>
<p>an Ox; <eg>The Cove has
hushed the Battener</eg>; i.e. <meaning><i>He has killed
the Ox</i></meaning>, in revenge on some Farmer,
who, perhaps, had got him sent to the
House of Correction.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BATTERED BULLY</title>
<p>an old well
cudgelled and bruised huffing fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>BAUBEE</title>
<p>an Halfpenny; as <eg>The Cove
ript the Maund but a single Baubee let's
souse him for it</eg> i.e. The Gentleman
has given the Beggar but a single Halfpenny; lets plunder him for his Niggardliness.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BAUBELS</title><title>or BAWBLES</title>
<p>Jewels, Tweezers, Snuff-boxes, any sort of
Gold or Silver Trinkets.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>BAWD</title>
<p>a Female Procuress.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BAWDY-BASKETS</title>
<p>a sort of diminutive Pedlars, who sell Obscene
Books, Pins, Tape, &c; but live more
by pilfering and stealing.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>BAWDY-HOUSE-BOTTLE</title>
<p>a very small one.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BEAR-GARDEN-DISCOURSE</title>
<p>common, filthy, nasty talk.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>BEARD-SPLITTER</title>
<p>a Whore-master.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BEAU-TRAPS</title>
<p>an <i>Order</i> of
<!--* page 3 *-->
Villains, Genteel-dressed Sharpers,
who lie in wait to insnare and draw in
young Heirs, raw Country Squires and
ignorant Fops.
</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BECK</title><title>HARMANBECK</title>
<p>a Beadle</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>BEEF</title>
<p>to alarm, as <eg>They have cryed
Beef upon us</eg>; they have discovered,
us and are in Pursuit of us.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BELCH</title>
<p>any sort of Malt-liquor so
called.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BELLY-CHEAT</title>
<p>an Apron.</p></entry>
<entry c="person" sortas="BEN"><title>A BEN</title>
<p>a foolish Fellow, a Simpleton.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj" sortas="BEN A"><title>BENISH</title>
<p>foolish, simple.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>BENAR</title>
<p>better.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>BENE</title><title><i> or</i> BIEN</title>
<p>good, <eg>Pike on the
Bene</eg>, i.e. Run away as fast as you can.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BENE-BOWSE</title>
<p>strong Liquor.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BENE-COVE</title>
<p>a good Fellow, a merry companion.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BENE-DARKMANS</title>
<p>good Night.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>BENESHIP</title>
<p>very good, very well.
<eg>Beneshiply</eg> Worshipfully.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BENEFEAKERS</title>
<p>Counterfeiters of
Bills, Bonds, Notes, Receipts, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BENEFEAKERS OF GYBES</title>
<p>Counterfeiters of Passes.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BESS</title>
<p><eg>Bring Bess and Glym</eg>; i.e. Forget not the Instrument to break
open the Dour, and the Dark Lanthorn.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BET</title>
<p>as <eg>secure the Bet</eg>, secure the Prize.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BETTY</title><title>BESS</title>
<p>a small Engine to
force open the Doors of Houses; <eg>Mill
the Gig with your Betty</eg>; i.e. Break
open the Door with your Instrument.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BEVER</title>
<p>An Afternoons Lunchion.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>BEVERAGE</title>
<p>Garnish-money.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BIDDY</title>
<p>a Chicken.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>BILK</title>
<p>to cheat or deceive. <eg>Bilk the
Rattling Cove</eg>; Sharp the Coachman of
his Hire.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BILL</title><title>BILBOA</title>
<p>a Sword. <eg>Bite
the Bill from the Cull</eg>; i.e. Whip the
Sword from his Side.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BILL <i>of Sale</i></title>
<p>a Bandore, or Widow's
Peak.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> BING</title>
<p>to go, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>BING-AWAST</title>
<p>Get you hence: Begone;
haste away; <eg>He Bing'd awast in a
Darkmans</eg>, i.e. He Stole away in the
Night-time. <eg>Bing we to Rum vile?</eg> i.e.
Go we to <i>London</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BINGO</title>
<p>Geneva, or Brandy.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BINGO-BOY</title>
<p>a great Geneva Drinker.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>BINGO-CLUB</title>
<p>a Club of Geneva Drinkers.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BINGO-MORT</title>
<p>a She Brandy Drinker.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BIRDS OF A FEATHER</title>
<p>Rogues
of the same Gang.</p></entry>
<!--* col *-->
<entry c="adj"><title>BIRD-WITTED</title>
<p>hare-brained; not
solid or stayed.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>BIT</title>
<p>Robbed, Cheated or Out-Witted. Also Drunk, as <eg>He has bit his
Grannum</eg>; He is very Drunk. <eg>Bit the
Blow</eg>, performed the Theft, played the
Cheat, <eg>You have bit a great Blow</eg>; You
have robbed somebody of or to a considerable
Value.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BITE</title>
<p>a Rogue, Sharper or Cheat;
also a Woman's Privities, as <eg>The Cull
wapt the Morts Bite</eg>; i.e. The Fellow
enjoyed the Woman briskly. <eg>Bite
the Biter</eg>, rob the Rogue, sharp the
Sharper, or Cheat the Cheater. <eg>Bite
the Cully</eg>, put the Cheat on a silly
Fellow. <eg>Bite the Roger</eg>, steal the
Portmanteau. <eg>Bite the Wiper</eg>, steal
the Handkerchief. <eg>He will not Bite or
swallow the Bait</eg>; He wont be drawn
in. <eg>To Bite on the Bit</eg>; To be pinched
or reduced to hard Meat; a scanty or
sorry sort of Living.</p></entry>
<entry c="phrase"><title>BLACK <i>and</i> WHITE</title>
<p>under one's
Hand, or in Writing.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BLAB</title>
<p>one that is not to be confided
in upon an Enterprize or Intrigue.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BLACK-BOX</title>
<p>a Lawyer.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BLACK-COAT</title>
<p>a Parson.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BLACK-GUARD</title>
<p>dirty, nasty, tatterred
roguish Boys, that formerly
were wont to attend at the Horse-Guards
to wipe Shoes, and clean Boots.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BLACK-JACK</title>
<p>a leather-Jug to drink in.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>BLACK-INDIES</title>
<p><i>Newcastle</i>, from
whence the Coals are brought.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BLACKMUNS</title>
<p>Hoods and Scarves of
Alamode and Lustrings.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BLACK-SPY</title>
<p>the Devil.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>BLANK</title>
<p>down looked, sheepish,
guilty.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>BLEACH</title>
<p>as <eg>The Mort lay last Night a
Bleaching</eg>; the Wench looks very fair
to Day.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BLEATERS</title>
<p>they that are cheated
by Jack in a Box.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BLEATING-CHEAT</title>
<p>a Sheep.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>BLEED</title>
<p>as, <eg>To bleed freely</eg>, i.e. To
part with their Money easily.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BLEEDING-CULLY</title>
<p>an easy Fellow,
this is profuse with his Money, or
persuaded to support all the Exravaganies
of his Companion or Mistress,
at his own Expence.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BLEW-JOHN</title>
<p>Wash, or After-wort.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>A BLIND</title>
<p>a Feint, a Pretence, a shift.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>A BLIND ALE-HOUSE</title>
<p>one fit to
conceal a pursued or hunted Villain.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BLIND-CHEEKS</title>
<p>the Breech.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BLIND-HARPERS</title>
<p>Canters, who
<!--* page 4 *-->
counterfeit Blindness, strowl about with
Harps, Fiddles, Bagpipes, &c; led by
a Dog or Boy.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>BLOCK-HOUSES</title>
<p>Prisons, Houses
of Correction, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue,bawd"><title>BLOSS</title>
<p>a Shop-lifter; also a Bully's
pretended Wife, or Mistress, whom he
guards, while she supports him; also a
Whore.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> BLOT <i>the Skrip, and jark it</i></title>
<p>i.e. to stand engaged, or be bound for any
Body.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BLOW</title>
<p>as <eg>He has bit his blow</eg>, he has
stollen the Goods, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="person,bawd"><title>BLOWER</title>
<p>a Mistress; also a
Whore.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> BLOW <i>off the Groundsils</i></title>
<p>i.e. To
lie with a Women on the Floor or
Stairs.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> BLOW <i>off the loose Corns</i></title>
<p>To lie now and then with a Woman.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BLUBBER</title>
<p>the Mouth, <eg>I've stopt the
Culls Blubber</eg>, I've stopt the Fellow's
Mouth; meant either by gagging or
murdering him.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>BLUBBERING</title>
<p>much Crying.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To look</i> BLUFF</title>
<p>To look big or
like Bull-beef.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BLUFFER</title>
<p>an Inn-keeper or victualler.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BLUNDERBUS</title>
<p>an awkward Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title><i>A</i> BLUSTRING <i>Fellow</i></title>
<p>a rude ratling Hector.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>BOARDING-<i>School</i></title>
<p><i>Bridewell</i> [[prob. rdg; orig. <i>Briedwell</i>]]
or
<i>New Prison</i>, or any Work-house, or
House of Correction, for Vagrants,
Beggars and Villains, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BOARDING <i>Scholars</i></title>
<p>Bridewell-Birds.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BOB</title>
<p>a Shop-lifts Comerade, Assistant
or Receiver. <i>Bob</i> also signifies
Safety.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title><i>It is all</i> BOB</title>
<p>i.e. All is Safe.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>BOBBED</title>
<p>cheated, tricked, baulked.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BOB-TAIL</title>
<p>a light woman, also an
Eunuch or impotent Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="person" sortas="BOB-LANDERS"><title>BOG-LANDERS</title>
<p><i>Irish</i> Men.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BOB-TROTTERS</title>
<p><i>Scotch</i> or <i>North</i>
Country Moss-troopers, or Highway-Men.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BOLTER <i>of White Fryars</i></title>
<p>one that
peeps out, but dares not venture abroad.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BOLTSPRIT</title>
<p>the nose, <eg>He has broke
his Boltsprit</eg>; He has lost his Nose by
the Pox.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> BONE</title>
<p>to apprehend, sieze, take
or arrest.
<eg>I'll Bone ye</eg>; I'll cause you
to be arrested.
<eg>We shall be Boned</eg>, we
shall be apprehended for the Robbery.
<eg>The Cove is Boned and gone to the Whit</eg>;
the Rogue is taken up and carried to
<i>Newgate</i>.
<eg>The Cull has Boned the Fen</eg>
<!--* col *-->
(for <i>Fence</i>) <i>or</i> <eg>Bloss that bit the Blow</eg>,
The Man has taken the Thief that
robbed his House or Shop, or picked
his Pocket.
<eg>If he be Boned he must shove
the Tumbler</eg>; If he be taken he'll be
whipt at the Gart's-tail.
<eg>I have Boned
her Dudds, Fagged and Brushed</eg>; I have
taken away my Mistress's cloaths, beat
her and am trooped off.
<eg>Boning the Fence</eg>; Finding the Goods where concealed
and siezing them.
<eg>He made no Bones of it.</eg></p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BONNY-CLAPPER</title>
<p>sowre Butter-milk.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>BOOTH</title>
<p>a House, as <eg>Heave the Booth</eg>;
Rob the House.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To Play</i> BOOTY</title>
<p>to play with a design to lose.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BOOZE</title>
<p><i>Vide</i> BOWSE.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>BORDE</title>
<p>a Shilling, <eg>Half a Borde</eg>,
Six-pence.</p></entry>
<!--* Liam proof read once up to here, 5th Aug 1999 *-->
<entry c="thing"><title>BOTTLE-HEAD</title>
<p>void of Wit.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BOUGHS</title>
<p>as <eg>He is up in the Boughs</eg>,
said of one upon the Rant, or in a great
Ferment.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BOUNCE</title>
<p>as <eg>a meer Bounce</eg>, a swaggering
Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BOUNCER</title>
<p>a Bully.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BOUNCING-<i>Cheat</i></title>
<p>a Bottle.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BOWMAN</title>
<p>as a <eg>Bowman-Prigg</eg>, an
eminent Thief or Villain; a dextrous
Cheat, or House-breaker.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BOWSE</title>
<p>Drink, or to drink; see
<i>Benbowse</i> [[Bene-Bowse]] and <i>Rumbowse</i>
[[<i>Rumbowse</i> is not actually defined]].</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>BOWSY</title>
<p>Drunk.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>BOWSING KEN</title>
<p>an Ale-house.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>BRACKET-FACE</title>
<p>ugly, homely,
ill-favoured.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BRAT</title>
<p>a little Child.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BRAVADO</title>
<p>a vapouring, or bouncing.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BRAVO</title>
<p>a mercenary Murderer,
that will kill any body.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>BRIM</title><title>or <i>Brimstone</i></title>
<p>a very impudent, lewd Woman.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BROTHER <i>of the Blade</i></title>
<p>a Sword-man or Soldier.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>BROTHER <i>of the Gussit</i></title>
<p>a Pimp,
Procurer; also a Whore-master.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BROTHER-STARLING</title>
<p>that lies
with the same Woman or builds in the same Nest.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BROTHER <i>of the String</i></title>
<p>a Fiddler,
or Harper.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> BRUSH</title>
<p>to flee, or run away.
<eg>The Cully is brushed or rubbed</eg>;
The Fellow is marched off or broke.
<eg>Bought a Brush</eg>, run away.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BRUSHER</title>
<p>a very full Glass of Liquor.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BUB</title>
<p>drink. <eg>Rumbub</eg> very good
Tipple.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BUBBER</title>
<p>a drinking Bowl; also a
<!--* page 5 *-->
great Drinker, also one who steals plate
from public Houses.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BUBE</title>
<p>the Pox.
<eg>The Mort tipt the
Bube upon the Cully</eg>; The Wench has
clapped the Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="v,person"><title><i>To</i> BUBBLE</title>
<p>To cheat or decieve.
<eg>A Bubble</eg>, an easy soft Fellow, one that is
fit to be imposed on, deluded, or
cheated.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BUCK</title>
<p>as a <eg>Bold Buck</eg>.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BUCK-FITCHES</title>
<p>old leacherous Fellows.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BUCK'S-FACE</title>
<p>a Cuckold.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title><i>A</i> BUDGE</title>
<p>one that slips into an
House in the Dark, and taking what
comes next to Hand, marches off with
it. If he meets with any body, he
asks, if such a Gentleman or Woman
be within; and is told, they know no
such Person, he begs Pardon, and says,
he was mistaken in the House, immediately
marches off, and will not stay
for a Reply.
<eg>To Budge</eg>, also signifies to
stir or move.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BUFF</title>
<p>a Dog.</p></entry>
<entry c="phrase"><title><i>How dost do my</i> BUFF</title>
<p>a familiar
Salutation among the Canting Tribe.</p></entry>
<entry c="phrase"><title><i>To stand</i> BUFF</title>
<p>is a Phrase used of
an obstinate hardened Rogue, who in a
Robbery will not be daunted at Resistance
or Opposition, or leave his Com-rogues in the Lurch, or a hardened
Rogue who will confess nothing.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BUFFER</title>
<p>a Rogue that kills good
sound Horses, only for their skins, by
running a long wire into them, and
sometimes knocking them on the Head.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BUFF-KNAPPER</title>
<p>a Dog-stealer,
that trades in all Sorts of Dogs, selling
them at a round Rate, and himself or
Partner stealing them the first Opportunity.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BUFFERS-NAB</title>
<p>a Dog's Head, used
in a counterfiet Seal to a false Pass.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>BUGGING</title>
<p>taking Money by Bailiffs
and Serjeants of the Defendant not to
arrest him.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BUGHER</title>
<p>a Dog.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BULCHIN</title>
<p>a chubbingly Boy or Lad.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,bawd"><title link="ignore">BULL</title>
<p>as, a <eg>Town Bull</eg>, a Whore-master.</p></entry>
<entry c="phrase"><title><i>TO look like</i> BULL <i>beef</i></title>
<p>to look big
and grim.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BULK</title>
<p>an Assistant to a <i>File</i> or Pick-Pocket,
who jostles a Person up against
the Wall, while the other picks his
Pocket.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BULKER</title>
<p>one that lodges all Night
on Shop windows and bulkheads.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>BULLS-EYE</title>
<p>a Crown or Five Shilling Piece.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BULLY</title>
<p>a supposed Husband to a
Bawd, or Whore; also a huffing Fellow,
<!--* col *-->
a pretended <i>Bravo</i>, but a Coward
at the Bottom.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BULLY-FOP</title>
<p>a maggot-pated, huffing,
silly, rattling Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue,bawd"><title>BULLY-HUFF</title>
<p>a poor sorry Rogue,
that haunts Bawdy-houses, and pretends
to get Money out of Gentlemen
and others, rattling and swearing the
Whore is his Wife.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BULLY-COCK</title>
<p>a Hector or bravo
sets on People to quarrel, pretending
to be a Second to them; and
then making Advantage of both.
</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BULLY-RUFFINS</title>
<p>Highway-men,
or Foot Pads, who attack with Oaths
and Curses, plunder without Mercy,
and frequently murder without Necessity.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BULLY-TRAP</title>
<p>a <i>Trapan</i>, a Sharper or Cheat.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BUM</title>
<p>a Bailiff or Serjeant.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BUNDLE-TAIL</title>
<p>a short, fat, or squat Lass.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BUNG</title>
<p>a Purse, Pocket or Fob.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>BUNG-NIPPERS</title>
<p>Cut purses, who
with a short sharp Knife, and a horn
Thumb, used to cut Purses. Since the
wearing of Purses is out of Fashion,
they are called <i>Files</i> or <i>Pick-Pockets</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BUNTING-TIME</title>
<p>when the Grass
is high enough to hide the young Men
and Maids.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>BUNT&stress;LINGS</title>
<p>Petticoats. <eg>Hale up
the main Buntlings</eg>, throw up the Women's
Petticoats.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>BURNT</title>
<p>poxed, or clapt.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> BURN <i>the Ken</i></title>
<p>is when Strollers
leave an Alehouse, without paying
their Quarters.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BURR</title>
<p>a Hanger on or Dependant.</p></entry>
<entry c="v,crime"><title><i>To</i> BUTTER</title>
<p>signifies also, to cheat
or defraud in a smooth or plausible
Manner; as, <eg>He'll not be Battered</eg>;
He's aware of your Design, He's upon his Guard, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BUTTER-BOXES</title>
<p>Dutchmen</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>BUTTERED-BUN</title>
<p>lying with a
Woman that has been just lain with by
another Man.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>BUTTOCK</title>
<p>a Whore.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>BUTTOCK-<i>Broker</i></title>
<p>a Bawd, also
a Match-maker.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title><i>A</i> BUTTOCK <i>and File</i></title>
<p>both Whore and Pickpocket.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>BUTTOCK <i>and Twang</i></title>
<p>or <eg>a down-right Buttock and sham File</eg>, a common
Whore, but no Pickpocket.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BUZZARD</title>
<p>a foolish, soft Fellow,
drawn in and culled or tricked.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>BY-BLOW</title>
<p>a Bastard.</p></entry>
<!--* page 6 *-->
</letter>
<letter name="c"><title>C</title>
<entry c="v"><title>CACKLE</title>
<p>to discover. <eg>The Cull
Cackles</eg>, The Rogue tells all.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CACKLING-CHEATS</title>
<p>Chickens,
Cocks or Hens.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CACKLING-FARTS</title>
<p>Eggs.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CALLE</title>
<p>a Cloak or Gown.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>CAMBRIDGE-FORTUNE</title>
<p>a Woman without any Substance.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CAMESA</title>
<p>a Shirt or Shift.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CAMPAIGN-COAT</title>
<p>in a <i>Canting</i>
Sense, the ragged, tatter'd, patch'd
Coat, worn by Beggars and Gypsies, in
order to move Compassion.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,rogue,bawd"><title>CANARY-BIRD</title>
<p>a little arch or
knavish Boy; a Rogue or Whore
taken, and clapp'd into the Cage or
Round-house.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime,punishment"><title>CANE <i>upon</i> ABEL</title>
<p>a good Stick or
Cudgel, well-favouredly laid on a
Man's shoulders.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>CANK</title>
<p>Dumb.
<eg>The Cull's Cank</eg>; the Rogue's Dumb; a Term used by
<i>Canters</i>, when one of their Fraternity,
being apprehended, upon Examination,
confesses nothing.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CANNIKIN</title>
<p>the Plague.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue" sortas="CANT"><title><i>A</i> CANT</title>
<p>an Hypocrite, a Dissembler,
a double-tongu'd, whining Person.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CANTING</title>
<p>the mysterious Language
of Rogues, Gypsies, Beggars,
Thieves, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>CANTING CREW</title>
<p>Beggars, Gypsies.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> CAP</title>
<p>to Swear.
<eg>I will Cap
downright</eg>, I will Swear home.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>CAPTAIN-HACKUM</title>
<p>a fighting,
blustering Bully.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>CAPTAIN-QUEERNABS</title>
<p>a Fellow
in poor Cloaths, or Shabby.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>CAPTAIN-SHARP</title>
<p>a great Cheat;
also a huffing, yet sneaking, cowardly
Bully.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>CAPTAIM-TOM</title>
<p>a Leader of the
Mob; also the Mob itself.</p></entry>
<entry c="money,person"><title>CARAVAN</title>
<p>a good round Sum of
Money about a Man; also him that is
cheated of it.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>CARRIERS</title>
<p>a Set or Rogues, who
are employ'd to look out, and whatch
upon the Roads, at Inns, &c; in order
to carry Information to their respective
Gangs, of a Booty in Prospect.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>CARTED-WHORE</title>
<p>whipp'd publickly,
and pack'd out of Town.</p></entry>
<entry c="place,bawd"><title>CASE</title>
<p>a House, Shop, or Warehouse;
also a Bawdy-house.
As <eg>Toute
the Case</eg>, view, mark, or eye the House
or Shop. <eg>'Tis all Bob; now let us dub
<!--* col *-->
the Gigg of the Case</eg>; now the Coast is
clear, let us fall on, and break open
the door of the House.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd" sortas="CASE-VROW"><title>A CASE-VROW</title>
<p>a Whore that
plie in a Bawdy-house.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CASH</title>
<p>or <i>Cassan</i>, cheese.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CASTER</title>
<p>a Cloak.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>CAT</title>
<p>a common Whore or Prostitute.
<eg>Who shall hang the bell about the
Cat's Neck?</eg> Who shall begin the Attack first? said of a desperate Undertaking.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>CATCH-FART</title>
<p>a Foot-boy.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CATCHING-HARVEST</title>
<p>a precarious
Time for Robbery; when many
People are out upon the Road, by
means of any adjacent Fair, Horse-race, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>CATCH-POLL</title>
<p>a Serjeant, or Bayliff,
that arrests People.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CATHARPIN FASHION</title>
<p>when
People in Company drink cross, and
not round about from the Right to
the Left, or according to the Sun's
Motion.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>CATTING</title>
<p>drawing a Fellow thro'
a Pond with a Cat. Also whoring.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CATMATCH</title>
<p>when a Rook or
Cully is engag'd amongst bad Bowlers.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>CAVAULTING SCHOOL</title>
<p>a Bawdy-house.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>CAUDGE-PAW'D</title>
<p>Left-handed.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>CAW-HANDED</title>
<p>awkward, not
dextrous, ready or nimble.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>CHAF'D</title>
<p>well beaten or bang'd.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>CHAPT</title>
<p>dry or thirsty.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj,punishment"><title>CHARACTERED</title>
<p>Burnt in the Hand;
as, <eg>They have pawn'd the Character upon
him</eg>; <i>i.e.</i> They have burnt the Rogue
in the Hand.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>CHATES</title>
<p>the Gallows.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CHATTS</title>
<p>Lice. To <eg>Squeeze the
Chatts</eg>; To crack or kill those Vermin.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>CHICKEN</title>
<p>a feeble little Creature,
of mean Spirit.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>CHINK</title>
<p>Money, so call'd because it
chinks in the Pocket.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title><i>A</i> CHIP</title>
<p>a Child. As, <eg>A Chip of the
old Block</eg>; A Son that is his Father's
likeness.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>CHIRPING-MERRY</title>
<p>very pleasant
over a Glass of good Liquor.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>CHIT</title>
<p>a Dandyprat, or Durgen, a
little trifling-Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>CHITTIFACE</title>
<p>a little puny Child.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CHIVE</title>
<p>a Kinfe, File or Saw.</p></entry>
<entry c="v,crime"><title><i>To</i> CHIVE <i>his Darbies</i></title>
<p>To saw asunder
his Irons or Fetters.</p></entry>
<entry c="v,thing"><title><i>To</i> CHOP</title>
<p>to change or barter. Also
a Job, or Booty, as <eg>A Chop by Chance</eg>,
a rare Booty, when 'twas not expected.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> CHOP</title>
<p>is also used to make Dispatch,
to slubber over in Post-haste, as
<!--* page 7 *-->
<eg>The Autem-Bawler, will soon quit the
Hums, for he chops up the Whiners</eg>; <i>i.e.</i>
The Parson will soon have dispatch'd
the Congregation, for he huddles over
the Prayers.</p></entry>
<entry c="v,crime"><title><i>To</i> CHOUSE</title>
<p>to cheat or trick.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>CHUB</title>
<p><eg>He is a young Chub</eg>, or <eg>a meer
Chub</eg>, very ignorant or unexperienc'd
in Gaming, not at all acquainted with
Sharping. <eg>A good Chub</eg>, said by the
Butchers, when they have bit a silly raw
Customer.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>CHUCK-FARTHING</title>
<p>a Parish Clerk.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CLACK</title>
<p>a Woman's Tongue.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>CLAN</title>
<p>a Family, Tribe, Faction,
or Party, in <i>Scotland</i> chiefly, but now
any where else.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CLANK</title>
<p>a Silver-tankard.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CLANKER</title>
<p>a swinging Lye.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>CLANK NAPPER</title>
<p>a Silver-tankard
Stealer. See <i>Rumbubber</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>CLAPPERDOGEON</title>
<p>a Beggar born
and bred.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment,adj"><title>CLAW'D-OFF</title>
<p>lustily lash'd. Also
swingingly pox'd or clap'd.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>CLEAR</title>
<p>very Drunk. <eg>The Cull is
clear, let's Bite him.</eg> The Fellow is
very drunk, let's Sharp him.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>CLEAVE</title>
<p>as, <eg>One that will cleave</eg>;
used of a Wanton Woman. <i>Vide Clown</i></p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CLENCH</title>
<p>a Pun or Quibble.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title><i>To</i> CLENCH</title>
<p>to nick a Business by
timing it; as <eg>The Cull has clench'd
the Job at a Pinch</eg>. The Rogue has
nick'd the Time, before any Passengers
came by, who might have rescu'd
the plunder'd Person.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>CLEYMS</title>
<p>Sores without Pain, raised on Beggars Bodies, by their own
Artifice and Cunning, (to move Charity)
by bruising Crows-foot, Spearwort,
and Salt together, and clapping
them onthe Place, which frets the
Skin; then with a Linnen Rag, which
sticks close to it, they tear off the Skin,
and strew on it a little Powder'd rsnick,
which makes it look angrily or
ill-favouredly, as if it were a real
Sore.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>CLERK'D</title>
<p>sooth'd, sunn'd imposed
on; <eg>The Cull will not be Clerk'd</eg>, <i>i.e.</i>
He will not be caught or taken by fair
Words.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> CLICK</title>
<p>to Snatch. <eg>I have Clickt
the Nab from the Cull</eg>; I whipt the Hat
from the Man's Head. <eg>Click the rum
Topping</eg>. Snatch that Woman's fine
Commode, or Head-Dress.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>CLICKER</title>
<p>[among the <i>Canters</i>.] He
whom they intrust to divide their
Spoils, and proportion to every one
his Share.</p></entry>
<!--* col *-->
<entry c="bawd"><title>CLICKET</title>
<p>Copulation of Foxes, and
thence used in a <i>Canting</i> Sense, for that
of Men and Women; as <eg>The Cull and
the Mort are at Clicket in the Dyke</eg>.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>CLICKETING</title>
<p>the Act of Fruition.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>CLINKER</title>
<p>a crafty Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CLINKERS</title>
<p>the Irons Felons wear
in Goals.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>CLOAK-TWITCHERS</title>
<p>Villains
who lurk in by and dark Places, to
snatch them off the Wearer's Shoulders.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>CLOD-HOPPER</title>
<p>a Ploughman.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CLOUD</title>
<p>Tobacco. <eg>Will you raise a
Cloud?</eg> Will you smoak a Pipe?</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CLOVEN</title>
<title><i>Cleave</i></title>
<title>or <i>Cleft</i></title>
<p>used of a young Woman who passes for a Maid,
and is not one.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CLOUT</title>
<p>a Handkerchief.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> CLOY</title>
<p>to Steal. <eg>Cloy the Clout</eg>;
steal the Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>CLOYERS</title>
<p>Thieves, Robbers,
Rogues.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>CLOYING</title>
<p>Stealing, Thieving,
Robbing.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>CLOWES</title>
<p>Rogues.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> CLUCK</title>
<p>a Wench's Propension
to Male-Conversation, by her romping
and playfulness; when they say, <eg>The
Mort Clucks</eg>.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CUMP</title>
<p>a Heap or Lump.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CLUMPISH</title>
<p>Lumpish.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>CLUNCH</title>
<p>a clumsy Clown, an awkward
or unhandy Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime,punishment"><title>CLY</title>
<p>Money. <eg>To cly the Jerk</eg>, to
be Whipt. <eg>Let's strike his Cly</eg>; Let's
get his Money from him. Also a
Pocket, as, <eg>Filed a Cly</eg>, Pick'd a Pocket.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>COACH-WHEEL</title>
<p>as, <eg>A Fore-Coach-Wheel</eg>
Half a Crown. <eg>A Hind-Coach-Wheel</eg>,
a Crown or Five-shilling Piece.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>COB</title>
<p>an <i>Irish</i> Dollar.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>COBBLE-COLTER</title>
<p>a Turkey. <eg>A
rum Cobble-colter</eg>, a fat large Cock-Turkey.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>COCK-BAWD</title>
<p>a Man who follows
that base Employment, of procuring;
a Pimp.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>COCKISH</title>
<p>wanton, uppish, forward.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>COCK-PIMP</title>
<p>a supposed Husband to
a Bawd.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>COCK-ROBBIN</title>
<p>a soft easy Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>COCK-SURE</title>
<p>very sure.</p></entry>
<entry c="money,person"><title>COD</title>
<p>a good Sum of Money; also a
Fool. <eg>A meer Cod</eg>, a silly, shallow
Fellow. <eg>A rum Cod</eg>; a good round
Sum of Money. <eg>An honest Cod</eg>; a trusty
Friend.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>COD's-<i>Head</i></title>
<p>a Fool.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>COFE</title>
<p>as COVE. Which See.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> COG</title>
<p>to cheat at Dice. <eg>To Cog a
Die</eg>; to conceal or secure a Die; also
the Money or whatever the <i>Sweetners</i>
<!--* page 8 *-->
drop, to draw in the Bubbles: Also to
wheedle.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> COG <i>a Dinner</i></title>
<p>to wheedle one out of a Dinner.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>COG <i>a Clout</i></title>
<title>or, <i>Cog a Sneezer</i></title>
<p>Beg an Handkerchief, or Snuff box.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>COGUE</title>
<p>of brandy, a small Cup or
Dram.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>COKER</title>
<p>a Lye. <eg>Rum Coker</eg>, a whisking Lye.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>COLD-<i>Tea</i></title>
<p>Brandy. <eg>A couple of cold
Words</eg>, a Curtain-Lecture. <eg>Cold Iron</eg>,
a derisory Periphrasis for a Sword.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>COLE</title>
<p>Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>COLLEGE</title>
<p><i>Newgate</i>; <i>New College</i>,
the <i>Royal-Exchange</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>COLLEGIATES</title>
<p>the Prisoners of
the one, and the Shop-keepers of the
other of those Places.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> COLLOGUE</title>
<p>wheedle.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>COLQUARRON</title>
<p>a Man's Neck; as,
<eg>His Colquarron is just about to be twisted</eg>.
He is just going to be turn'd off.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>COLT</title>
<p>an Inn-keeper that lends a
Horse to a Highway-man, or to
Gentleman Beggars; also a Lad newly
initiated into Roguery.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>COLT-BOWL</title>
<p>laid short of the
Jack, by a [COLT-BOWLER]</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>COL-BOWLER</title>
<p>a raw or unexperienced Person.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> COME</title>
<p>to lend. <eg>Has he come it?</eg>
Has he lent it to you?</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>COMING-<i>Women</i></title>
<p>such as are free of
their Flesh; also breeding Women.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>COMMISSION</title>
<p>a shirt.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>COMMON-<i>Garden-Gout</i></title>
<p>or rather
<eg>Covent-Garden-Gout</eg>, the Foul Disease.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>COMFORTABLE-<i>Importance</i></title>
<p>a Wife.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>CONFECT</title>
<p>conterfeit, feigned.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj,crime"><title>CONTENT</title>
<p><eg>I beat him to his Heart's
Content</eg>; <i>till he had enough of Fighting.</i>
Also to murder a Person, who resists
being robb'd. <eg>The Cull's Content</eg>; <i>i.e.</i>
He is past complaining.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CONTRE-TEMPS</title>
<p>a fruitless Attempt,
or at an unseasonable Time.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>CONVENIENT</title>
<p>a Mistress; also a
Whore.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>CONVENIENCY</title>
<p>a Wife; also a
Mistress.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CONUNDRUMS</title>
<p>Whims, Maggots,
and such like.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>CONY</title>
<title>or <i>Tom Cony</i></title>
<p>a silly Fellow;
<eg>A meer Cony</eg>, very silly indeed.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title><i>A</i> COLD-COOK</title>
<p>an Undertaker of
Funerals.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>COOK-RUFFIN</title>
<p>the Devil of a
Cook; or a very bad one.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>COOL-CRAPE</title>
<p>When a Person dies,
he is said to be put into his <i>Cool-crape</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>COOLER</title>
<p>a Woman.</p></entry>
<!--* col *-->
<entry c="rogue"><title>COOL-LADY</title>
<p>a Wench that sells
Brandy (in Camps) a Suttler.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>COOL-NANTZ</title>
<p>Brandy.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>CORK-BRAIN'D</title>
<p>a very impudent,
harden'd, brazen-faced Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>COSTARD</title>
<p>the Head. <eg>I'll give ye a
Knock on the Costard</eg>; I'll hit ye a Blow
on the Pate.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>COTTON</title>
<p><eg>They don't cotton</eg>; They
don't agree well.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> COUCH</title>
<p>to lie down, as <eg>To
Couch a Hogshead</eg>; To go to Bed.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,rogue"><title>COVE</title>
<p>a Man, a Fellow; also a
Rogue. <eg>The Cove was Bit</eg>; The Rogue
was out-sharped or out-witted. <eg>The
Cove has bit the Cole</eg>; The Rogue has
stollen the Money. <eg>That Cove's a rum
Diver</eg>; That Fellow is a clever Pick-pocket.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>COVEY <i>of Whores</i></title>
<p>a well-fill'd Bawdy-house.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>COUNTERFEIT-CRANK</title>
<p>a genteel
Cheat, a Sham or Impostor, appearing in divers Shapes: one who
sometimes counterfeits Mens hands, or
forges Writings; at others personates
other Men: is sometimes a Clipper or
Coiner; at others a Dealer in Counterfeit
Jewels. Sometimes a strowling
Mountebank: To Day he is a Clergyman
in Distress; to Morrow a reduced
Gentleman.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>VOURT-<i>card</i></title>
<p>a gay, fluttering
Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title brace="right">COURT-<i>Holy-Water</i></title>
<title>COURT-<i>Promises</i></title>
<p>fair Speeches without
Performance.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>COURT-<i>Tricks</i></title>
<p>State-Policy &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>COWS-BABY</title>
<p>a Calf.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>CRACK</title>
<p>a Whore.</p></entry>
<entry c="v,crime"><title><i>To</i> CRACK</title>
<p>is also used to break
open; as, <eg>To Crack up a Door</eg>; To
break a Door open.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CRACKER</title>
<p>the Backside; also Crust.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>CRACKING</title>
<p>boasting, vapouring.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>CRACKISH</title>
<p>whorish.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CRACKMANS</title>
<p>Hedges; as, <eg>The Cull
thought to have lop'd, by breaking thro'
the Crackmans; but we fetch'd him back
by a Nope on the Costard, which made
him silent</eg>; <i>i.e.</i> The Gentleman thought
to escape by breaking through the
Hedges; but we brought him back by
a great Blow on the Head, which laid
him for Dead.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CRAG</title>
<p>a Neck; also the Stomach,
or Womb.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CRAMP-RINGS</title>
<p>Bolts or Shackles.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>CRAMP-WORDS</title>
<p>Sentence of
Death passed upon a Criminal by the
Judge: as, <eg>He has just undergone the
<!--* page 9 *-->
Cramp-Word</eg>; <i>i.e.</i> Sentence is just
passed upon him.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>CRANK</title>
<p>brisk, pert.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>CRAP</title>
<p>Money. <eg>Nim the Crap</eg>; Steal
the Money. <eg>Wheedle for Crap</eg>; To
coax Money out of any Body.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>CRASH</title>
<p>to Kill. <eg>Crash the Cull</eg>, <i>i.e.</i>
Kill the Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CRASHING-<i>Cheats</i></title>
<p>Teeth.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>CREATURES</title>
<p>Men raised by others,
and their <i>Tools</i> ever after.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> CREEME</title>
<p>to slip or slide any
Thing into another's Hand.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>CREW</title>
<p>a Knot or Gang; as, <eg>A
Crew of Rogues</eg>, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>CRIMP</title>
<p>as, <eg>To play Crimp</eg>, to lay or
bet on one Side, and (by foul Play) to
let the other win, having a Share of
the Purchase.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>Run a</i> CRIMP</title>
<p>to run a Race or
Horse-match foully or knavishly.</p></entry>
<entry c="phrase"><title><i>He</i> CRIMPS <i>it</i></title>
<p>He plays booty. <eg>A
crimping Fellow</eg>, a sneaking Cur.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CRINKUMS</title>
<p>the foul Disease.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>CROCKERS</title>
<p>Fore-stallers, Regraters;
otherwise called <i>Kidders</i> and
<i>Tranters</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>CROKER</title>
<p>a Groat or Fourpence.
<eg>The Cull tipt me a Croker</eg>, the Fellow
gave me a Groat.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>CRONY</title>
<p>a Comerade [in a <i>Canting</i>
Sense.] Two or Three Rogues, who
agree to beg or rob in Partnership, call
one another <i>Crony</i>; as, <eg>Such a one is
my Crony</eg>; as much as to say, He and I
go Snacks.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>CROP</title>
<p>Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CROPPIN</title>
<p>the Tail, as, <eg>The Croppin
of the Rotan</eg>, The Tail of the Cart.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CROPPIN-KEN</title>
<p>a Privy or Bog-house.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> CROSS-BITE</title>
<p>to draw in a Friend,
yet snack with the Sharper; also to
countermine or disappoint.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CROWN <i>Office</i></title>
<p>as, <eg>He is got into
the Crown Office</eg>, <i>i.e.</i> He's got drunk.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>CRUISERS</title>
<p>Beggars; Also Highway
Spies, who traverse the Road, to give
Intelligence of a Booty, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>CRUMP</title>
<p>one that helps Sollicitors
to <i>Affidavit-Men</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>CRUSTY-BEAU</title>
<p>one that lies with
a Cover over his Face all Night, and
uses Washes, Paint, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title><i>Young</i> CUB</title>
<p>a new Gamester drawn
in to be rook'd.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>CUCUMBERS</title>
<p>Taylors.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>CUDGELLIERS</title>
<p>a Mob rudely
arm'd; also Cudgel-Players.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>CUFFIN</title>
<p>a Man.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>CUFFIN-QUIRE</title>
<p>See <i>Quire Cuffin</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="v,punishment"><title>CULP</title>
<p>a Kick or Blow.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,rogue"><title>CULL</title>
<p>a Man, either honest, or
<!--* col *-->
otherwise. <eg>A Bob-Cull</eg>, a Sweet-humour'd
Man to a Wench. <eg>The Cull
naps us</eg>; The Person robb'd apprehends
us. <eg>A curst Cull</eg>, an ill-natur'd Fellow,
a Churl to a Woman.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>CULLY</title>
<p>a Fop, a Fool, one who is
easily drawn in and cheated by Whores
and Rogues.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>CUNNING-Shaver</title>
<p>a sharp Fellow,
one that sharps or shaves (as they call
it) close.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>CUP-SHOT</title>
<p>Drunk.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CUP <i>of the Creature</i></title>
<p>strong-Liquor.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>CURLE</title>
<p>Clippings of Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>CURSITORS</title>
<p>reduced Lawyers, assuming
to themselves the Knowledge
of the Quirks and Quiddities of the
Law, and are perpetually fomenting litigious
Brawls, and insignificant Contentions,
among the Scum of the Vulgar.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>CURTAILS</title>
<p>whose Practice is to
cut off Pieces of Silk, Cloth, Linnen
or Stuff, that hang out at the Shop-Windows
of Mercers, Drapers, &c;
as also sometimes the Tails of Womens
Gowns, their Hoods, Scarves,
Pinners, - if richly Lac'd.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>CURTAIL'D</title>
<p>cut off, dock'd, shorten'd, reduced.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>CURTAIN-Lecture</title>
<p>Womens impertinent
scolding at their Husbands
behind the Curtain.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,bawd"><title>CURTEZAN</title>
<p>a genteel fine Miss,
or Quality Whore.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>CUT</title>
<p>Drunk. <eg>Deep Cut</eg>, very
Drunk. <eg>Cut in the Leg or Back</eg>, the
same. <eg>To Cut</eg>, also signifies to speak.
<eg>To Cut bene</eg>, to speak gently, civilly or
kindly; <eg>To Cut bene (<i>or</i> benar) Whidds</eg>,
to give good Words. <eg>To Cut queere
Whid's</eg>, to give ill Language. A Blow
with a Stick or Cane, is also called a
<i>Cut</i>. As, <eg>I took him a Cut cross the
Shoulders</eg>.</p></entry>
<!--* end of C *-->
</letter>
<letter name="d"><title>D</title>
<entry c="adj"><title>DAB</title>
<p>expert, well vers'd in
Roguery.
<eg>A Rum Dab</eg>, a very
dextrous Fellow at Thieving, Cheating, Sharping, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>DACE</title>
<p>Two-pence; Tip me a <i>Dace</i>, Lend me Two-pence, or pay
so much for me.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>DAG</title>
<p>a Gun.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>DAMBER</title>
<p>a Rascal. See <i>Dimber</i></p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>DAMME-BOY</title>
<p>a roaring, mad,
blustring Fellow, a Scourer of the
Streets.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>DANCERS</title>
<p>Stairs.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>DANDYPRAT</title>
<p>a little puny Fellow.</p></entry>
<!--* page 10 *-->
<entry c="money"><title>DARBY</title>
<p>ready Money; as, <eg>The Cull
tipp'd us the Darby</eg>; The Fellow gave
us all his ready Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>DARBIES</title>
<p>Irons, Shackles or Fetters.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>DARK <i>Cully</i></title>
<p>a married Man, who
keeps a Mistress, and creeps to her in
the Night, for fear of Discovery.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>DARKMANS</title>
<p>the Night; <eg>The Child
of Darkmans or Darkness</eg>, a Bell-man.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>DARKMANS-<i>Budge</i></title>
<p>one that slides
into a House in the Dusk, to let in
more Rogues to rob.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>DASH</title>
<p>a Tavern-Drawer.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>DAWB</title>
<p>a Bribe, a Reward for
secret Service; as, <eg>The Cull was gybbed,
because he could not dawb</eg>. The Rogue
was punished, because he had no Pence
to bribe off his Sentence.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>DEAD <i>Cargo</i></title>
<p>a Term used by
Rogues, when they are disappointed in
the Value of their Booty.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>DEAD-MEN</title>
<p>empty Pots or Bottles
ona Tavern Table.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>DEAR <i>Joyes</i></title>
<p><i>Irishmen</i></p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>DECUS</title>
<p>a Crown or Five Shilling
Piece.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>DEFT <i>Fellow</i></title>
<p>a tidy, neat, little
Man.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>DEGEN</title>
<p>a Sword. <eg>Nim the Degen</eg>,
whip the Sword from the Gentleman's
side.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>DELLS</title>
<p>young bucksome Wenches,
rip and prone to Venery, but who
have not lost their Virginity, which
the <i>Upright Man</i> pretends to, and
seizes: Then she is free for any of the
Fraternity. Also a common Strumpet.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>DEVIL-<i>drawer</i></title>
<p>a sorry Painter.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>DEUSEAVILE</title>
<p>the Country.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>DEUSEAVILE-<i>Stampers</i></title>
<p>Country Carriers.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>DEWS-<i>wins</i></title>
<title>or, <i>Deux-wins</i></title>
<p>Two-pence.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>DIDDLE</title>
<p><i>Geneva</i>, a Liquor very
much drank by the lowest Rank of
People.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>DIMBER</title>
<p>pretty.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>DIMBER-<i>Cove</i></title>
<p>a pretty Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>DIMBER-<i>Damber</i></title>
<p>a Top Man or
Prince amongst the <i>Canting Crew</i>;
also the chief Rogue of the Gang, or
the compleatest Cheat.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>DIMBER-<i>Mort</i></title>
<p>a pretty Wench.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> DING</title>
<p>to knock down.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>DING-<i>Boy</i></title>
<p>a Rogue, a Hector, a
Bully, a Sharper.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>DING-<i>Dong</i></title>
<p>helter-skelter.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>DIPT</title>
<p>engag'd or in Debt, pawn'd
or mortgag'd.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>DISMAL-<i>Ditty</i></title>
<p>a Psalm at the Gallows.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>DISPATCHES</title>
<p>a <i>Mittimus</i>, a Justice
<!--* col *-->
of Peace's Warrant to send a Rogue
to Prison, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> DIVE</title>
<p>to pick a Pocket.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>DIVER</title>
<p>a Pick-pocket. See <i>File</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>DOASH</title>
<p>a Cloak.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title><i>To</i> DOCK</title>
<p>to lie witha Woman.
<eg>The Cull Docks the Dell in the Darkmans</eg>;
the Rogue lay with the Wench all
Night.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>DOCTOR</title>
<p>a false Die that will run
but two or three Chances. <eg>They put
the Doctor upon him</eg>; they cheated him
with false Dice.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>DOMERARS</title>
<title>or DROMMERARS</title>
<p>Rogues, pretending to have had their
Tongues cut out, or to be born Dumb
and Deaf, who artificially turn their
Tip of their Tongues into their
Throat, and with a Stick making it
bleed.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>DOSE</title>
<p>Burglary, a breaking open a
House, Lock, Door, &c; as, <eg>He is cast
for Felon and Dose</eg>; <i>i. e.</i> found Guilty
of Felony and Burglary.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>DOWN-HILLS</title>
<p>Dice that run low.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>DOXIES</title>
<p>She beggars, Wenches,
Whores.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>DRAB</title>
<p>a Whore, or Slut; a <eg>dirty
Drab</eg>, a very nasty Slut.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>DRAWERS</title>
<p>Stockens.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>DRAW-<i>Latches</i></title>
<p>Robbers of Houses
that were fastened only by <i>Latches</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>DRIPPER</title>
<p>a sort of Clap, or venereal
Gleet.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>DROMEDARY</title>
<p>a heavy, bundling
Thief or Rogue. <eg>A purple Dromedary</eg>;
a Bungler or a dull Fellow at Thieving.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>DROMMERARS</title>
<p>See <i>Domerars</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>DROP <i>a Cog</i></title>
<p>to let fall (with Design
to draw in and cheat) a Piece of Gold;
also the Piece itself.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>DROP <i>in his Eye</i></title>
<p>almost drunk.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>DRUMBELO</title>
<p>a dull, heavy Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>DRY-<i>Bob</i></title>
<p>a smart or sharp Repartee.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>DRY-<i>Boots</i></title>
<p>a sly, close cunning
Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>DUB</title>
<p>a pick-lock Key.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>DUB <i>the Gigger</i></title>
<p>open the Door.
<eg>We'll strike it upon the Dub</eg>, We will
rob that Place.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>DUBBER</title>
<p>a Picker of Locks.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title><i>A</i> DUCE</title>
<p>Two pence.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>DUDDS</title>
<p>Cloaths or Goods. <eg>Rum
Dudds</eg>; fine or rich Cloaths or Goods.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>DUDD-<i>Cheats</i></title>
<p>Cloaths and things
stollen. <eg>Abraham Cove has wonne<interj>, (or <i>bit</i>)</interj> Rumm Dudds</eg>; the poor Fellow
has stollen very costly Cloaths.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title><i>To</i> DUM-<i>found</i></title>
<p>to beat soundly.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>DUNAKER</title>
<p>a Stealer or Cows, or
Calves, &c;</p></entry>
<!--* page 11 *-->
<entry c="rogue"><title>DUDDERING <i>Rake</i></title>
<p>a thundering
Rake, or of the first Rank, one devilishly
lewd.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>DUP</title>
<p>to enter, or open a Door:
<eg>Dup the Ken</eg>, Enter the House. <eg>Dup
the Boozing Ken and booz a Gage</eg>, Go
into the Ale-house and drink a Pot.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title link="ignore">DUST</title>
<p>Money; <eg>Down with your
Dust</eg>, Deposite your Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="v,drink"><title>DUST <eg>it away</eg></title>
<p>Drink quick about.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>DUTCH-<i>Reckoning</i></title>
<title>or <i>Alte-mall</i></title>
<p>a
verbal or lump Accompt, without Particulars;
as brought in at the <i>Spunging-Houses</i>,
at <i>Bawdy Houses</i>, and other
such like Places of ill Repute.</p></entry>
<!--* end of D *-->
</letter>
<letter name="e"><title>E</title>
<entry c="person"><title>EAGLE</title>
<p>a winning Gamester.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>EARNEST</title>
<p>Part or Share.
<eg>Tip me my Earnest</eg>,
Give me my Snack or
Dividend.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>EASY</title>
<p>facile, supple, pliable, mnageable.
<eg>As make the Cull easy</eg>; Gagg
him, tht he may make no Noise;sometimes used for murdering a Person
robbed, for fear of Discovery.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>EBB <i>water</i></title>
<p>when there is but little
money in the Pocket.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>EDGE</title>
<p>as, <eg>Fall Back, fall Edge</eg>; <i>i.e.</i>
<meaning><i>At all Adventures</i></meaning>; used to express a
villainous and daring Resolution for
Mischief, whatever may be the Consequence.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> EDGE</title>
<p>or, as 'tis vulgarly call'd,
<i>To</i> EGG one on; to stimulate, provoke,
push forwards, so sharpen, or whet on
for Mischief.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>ELBOW-<i>shaker</i></title>
<p>a Ganester or Sharper.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>ELF</title>
<p>little.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>EMPTY</title>
<p>as, <eg>The Cull looks Empty</eg>;
or, <eg>'Tis all Empty</eg>; i.e. the Person or
House has not the Riches reported, or
is not worth attempting.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>ENGLISH <i>Manufacture</i></title>
<p>Ale, Beer,
or Cyder.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>EQUIPT</title>
<p>rich; also having new
Cloaths. <eg>Well equipt</eg>, plump in the
Pocket, or very full of Money; also
very well drest. <eg>The Cull equipt me
with a Brace of Meggs</eg>, The Gentleman
furnish'd me with a Coupleof Guineas.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>ERIFFS</title>
<p>Rogues just initiated, and
beginning to practice.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>EVES</title>
<p>Hen-Roosts.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>EVES-<i>Dropper</i></title>
<p>one that lurks about
to rob or steal.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>EWE</title>
<title>or, <i>The white Ewe</i></title>
<p>a Top-woman very beautiful.</p></entry>
<!--* col *-->
</letter>
<letter name="f"><title>F</title>
<entry c="person"><title>FACER</title>
<p>a Bumber without Lip-room.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>FADGE</title>
<p>as, It won't fadge or do.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>FAG</title>
<p>to Beat; as, <eg>Fag the Bloss</eg>,
Bang the Wench; <eg>Fag the Fen</eg>, Drub
the Whore. Whence [[to Faggot, next entry]].</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment,crime"><title><i>To</i> FAGGOT</title>
<p>to bind Hand and
Foot; as <eg>Faggot the Culls</eg>; <i>i.e.</i> Bind
the Men.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>FAIR-<i>Roe-Buck</i></title>
<p>a Woman in the
Bloom of her Beauty.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>FAMBLE-<i>Cheats</i></title>
<p>Gold Rings, or
Gloves.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>FAMBLERS</title>
<p>Villains that go up and
down selling counterfeit rings, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>FAMBLES</title>
<p>Rings; also the Hands.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> FAMGRASP</title>
<p>to agree or make
up a Difference. <eg>Famgrasp the Cove</eg>,
to agree with the Adversary.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>FAMILY <i>of Love</i></title>
<p>Lew'd Women,
Whores; also a Sect.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>FAMMS</title>
<p>Hands.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>FARTING-<i>Crackers</i></title>
<p>Breeches.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>FASTNER</title>
<p>a Warrant.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>FASTNESS</title>
<p>Boggs.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>FAT</title>
<p>rich, as, <eg>A Fat Cull</eg>; a rich
Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>FAULKNER</title>
<p>a Tumbler, a Juggler,
a Shewer of Tricks, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>FAYTORS</title>
<title>or FATORS</title>
<p>A kind of Gypsies, pretending to tell People
their Fate or Destiny, or what they
were born to.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>FEATHER-<i>bed-lane</i></title>
<p>any bad Road,
but particularly that betwixt <i>Dunchurch</i>
and <i>Daintry</i>. <eg>To Feather his nest</eg>, to
inrich himself by indirect Means, or
at the expence of others.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>FEINTING</title>
<p>an Attempt on one part
of a House, or Road, &c; when their
cheif Stress or Attempt lies in another.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>FEN</title>
<p>a Strumpet, or Bawd, a common
prostitute.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> FENCE</title>
<p>to spend, <eg>Fence his Hog</eg>,
spend his Shilling.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title><i>A</i> FENCE</title>
<p>is also a Receiver and
Securer of Stollen Goods.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>FENCING-<i>Cully</i></title>
<p>the fame.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>FENCING-<i>Ken</i></title>
<p>a Warehouse,
where Stollen Goods are secured.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>FERME</title>
<p>a Hole.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>FERMERLY-<i>Beggars</i></title>
<p>all those that
have not the sham Sores or <i>Cleymes</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>FERRET</title>
<p>a Parn-broker, or
Tradesman that sells Goods upn Trust
at excessive Rates, and then hunts
them, and often throws them into
Goal, where they perish for his Debt.</p></entry>
<!--* page 12 *-->
<entry c="adj"><title>FERRETED</title>
<p>cheated</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>FETCH</title>
<p>a Trick or Wheedle. <eg>A
meer Fetch</eg>.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> FIB</title>
<p>to beat; <eg>Fib the Cove's
Quarron in the Rompad, for the Lour in
his Bung</eg>. Beat the Man in the Highway
for the Money in his Purse.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>FIDDLE</title>
<p>a Writ to Arrest.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>FIDLERS-<i>Pay</i></title>
<p>Thanks and Wine.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime" sortas="FILCH1"><title><i>To</i> FILCH</title>
<p>to Steal.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing" sortas="FILCH2"><title><i>A</i> FILCH</title>
<p>a Staff, with a Hole thro'
and a Spike at the Bottom, to pluck
Cloaths from a Hedge or any thing out
of a Casement.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>FILCHERS</title>
<p>the same with ANGLERS.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>FILCHING-<i>Cove</i></title>
<p>a Man-Thief.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>FILCHING-<i>Mort</i></title>
<p>a Woman-Thief.</p></entry>
<entry c="v" sortas="FILE 01"><title><i>To</i> FILE</title>
<p>to Rob, or Cheat.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue" sortas="FILE 02"><title><i>A</i> FILE</title>
<title>or <i>Bungnipper</i></title>
<p>Pick-pockets,
who generally go in Company with a
Rogue, called a <i>Bulk</i> or <i>Bulker</i>, whose
Business 'tis to jostle the Person against
the Wall, while the <i>File</i> picks his
Pocket; and generally gives it to an
<i>Adam-tiler</i>, who scowers off with it.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>FILE-<i>Cloy</i></title>
<p>a Pick-Pocket, Thief or
Rogue; the same as FILE.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>FIRE-<i>Ship</i></title>
<p>a Pockey Whore.</p></entry>
<entry c="money,adj"><title>FLAG</title>
<p>a Groat; <eg>The Flag of Defiance
is out</eg>, (among the Tarrs) the
Fellow's Face is very red, and he is
drunk.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>FLAM</title>
<p>a Trick or Sham Story.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>FLANDERS-<i>Fortunes</i></title>
<p>of small Substance.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>FLANDERS-<i>Pieces</i></title>
<p>Pictures that
look fair at a Distance, but coarser
near at Hand.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>FLAP DRAGON</title>
<p>a Clap or Pox.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>FLASH</title>
<p>a Peruke. <eg>Rum Flash</eg>, a
long, full, high-priz'd Wig. <eg>Queer-Flash</eg>,
a sorry weather-beaten Wig.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>FLASH-<i>Ken</i></title>
<p>a House were Thieves
use, and are connived at.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>FLAW'D</title>
<p>Drunk.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> FLEECE</title>
<p>to Rob, Plunder or
Strip.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue,bawd"><title>FLESH <i>Broker</i></title>
<p>a Match-maker;
also a Bawd.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>FLIBUSTERS</title>
<p><i>West Indian</i> Pirates,
or Buckaneers, Free-booters.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>FLICKER</title>
<p>a Drinking Glass. <eg>The
Flicker snapt</eg>, the Glass is broken. <eg>Nim
the Flicker</eg>. Steal the Glass. <eg>Rum
Flicker</eg>, a large Glass or Rummer.
<eg>Queer Flicker</eg>, a green or ordinary
Glass.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>FLICKING</title>
<p>to cut, cutting, as, <eg>Flick
me some Panom and Cossam</eg>; Cut me
some Bread and Cheese. And, <eg>Flick
the Peter</eg>, cut off the Cloak-bag or
Portmanteau.</p></entry>
<!--* col *-->
<entry c="v,punishment"><title>FLOGG</title>
<p>to Whip</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>FLOGG'D</title>
<p>severely lash'd.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>FLOGG'D <i>at the Tumbler</i></title>
<p>whipt at the Cart's Arse.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment,bawd"><title>FLOGGING</title>
<p>a naked Woman's
whipping with Rods an old (usually)
and (sometimes) a young Letcher.
<eg>The Prancer drew the Queer Cove, at
the Crop-pin of the Rotan, through the
Rum Pads of the Runville, and was
Flogg'd by the Rum Cove</eg>, <i>i. e.</i> The
Rogue was dragg'd at the Cart's tail
through the chief Streets of <i>London</i>,
and was soundly whipt by the Hangman.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>FLOGGING-<i>Cove</i></title>
<p>the Beadle, or
Whipper in <i>Bridewell</i>, or any such
Place.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue,bawd"><title>FLOGGING-<i>Cully</i></title>
<p>an old Letcher,
who, to stimulate himself to Venery,
causes himself to be whipp'd with
Rods.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>FLOGGING-<i>Stake</i></title>
<p>a whipping
Post.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>FLORENCE</title>
<p>a Wench that is
touz'd and ruffled.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj,money"><title>FLUSH <i>in the Pocket</i></title>
<p>full of Money.
<eg>The Cull is Flush in the Fob</eg>, the Spark's
Pocket is well lin'd with Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink,adj"><title>FLUSTER'D</title>
<p>Drunk.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>FLUTE</title>
<p>the Recorder of <i>London</i>,
or of any other Town.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>FLYERS</title>
<p>Shoes.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>FLYING <i>Camps</i></title>
<p>Beggars plying in
Bodies at Funerals.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>FOB</title>
<p>a Cheat, or Trick.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>FOB <i>off</i></title>
<p>to cheat or deceive.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>FOG</title>
<p>Smoke.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>FOGUS</title>
<p>Tobacco. <eg>Tip me a Gage of
Fogus</eg>, Give me a Pipe of Tobacco.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>FOOTMAN's <i>Mawn'd</i></title>
<p>an artificial
Sore made with unslak'd Lime, Soap,
an the Rust of old Iron, on the Back
of a Beggar's Hand, as if hurt by the
Bite or Kick of a Horse.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>FOOT-<i>Pads</i></title>
<title>or LOW <i>Pads</i></title>
<p>a Crew
of Villains, who rob on Foot, some
of them using long Poles or Staves,
with an Iron Hook at the End, with
which they either pull Gentlemen from
their Horses, or knock them down: At
other Times, they skulk under Hedges
or behind Banks in the Road, and suddenly
starting out from their Covert,
one seizes the Bridle, while the other
dismounts the Passenger: and so rob,
and often murder him.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>FORMAN <i>of the Jury</i></title>
<p>one that engrosses
all the Talk to himself.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue" sortas="FORK 01"><title>FORK</title>
<p>a Pick-pocket. <eg>Lets Fork
him</eg>; Let us pick that Man's Pocket.
<!--* page 13 *-->
It is done by thrusting the Fingers,
strait, stiff, open and very quick into
the Pocket, and so closing them, hook
what can be held between them.</p></entry>
<entry c="person" sortas="FORK 02"><title>A FORK</title>
<p>is also used for a Spendthrift.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>FORLORN-<i>Hope</i></title>
<p>losing Gamesters.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,rogue"><title>FORTUNE-<i>Hunters</i></title>
<p><i>Irishmen</i>, Pursuers
of rich Heiresses, &c; to obtain
them in Marriage. <eg>A Creature of Fortune</eg>,
one that lives by his Wit.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>FORTUNE-<i>Tellers</i></title>
<p>the Judges of
Life and Death.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>FOUNDLING</title>
<p>a Child dropt in the
Streets for the Parish to keep.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue" sortas="FOX"><title link="ignore">A FOX</title>
<p>a sharp, cunning Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink,adj"><title>FOXED</title>
<p>Drunk.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>FOYST</title>
<p>a Cheat, a Rogue.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>FRATERS</title>
<p>such as beg with sham
Patents or Briefs for Spitals, Prisons,
Fires, Innundations, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>FREE-<i>Booters</i></title>
<p>lawless Robbers, and
Plunderers; also Soldiers serving for
that Privilege without Pay, Inroaders.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>FREEHOLDER</title>
<p>he whose Wife goes
with him to the Alehouse.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>FREEZE</title>
<p>a thin, small, hard Cyder,
much used by Vintners and Coopers in
parting their Wines, to lower the
Price of them, and to advance their
Gain. <eg>A Freezing Vintner</eg>, a vintner
that balderdashes his Wine.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>FRENCH <i>Gout</i></title>
<p>the Pox. <eg>A Blow
with a French Faggot stick</eg>, when the
Nose is fallen by the Pox.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>FRENCHIFIED</title>
<p>clapt or Poxt.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>FRIGOT <i>well rigged</i></title>
<p>a Woman well
drest and genteel.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,bawd"><title>FROE</title>
<p>for <i>Vrowe</i>, (<i>Dutch</i>) a Wife,
Mistress, or Whore, <eg>Brush to your Froe
<interj>(or <i>Blos</i>)</interj> and wheedle for Crap</eg>, whip
to your Mistress, and speak her fair
to give, or lend you some Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>FROG-<i>Landers</i></title>
<p>Dutchmen.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment,adj"><title>FRUMMAGEMM'D</title>
<p>choaked, strangled, or hanged.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>FRUMP</title>
<p>a dry Bob, or Jest.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>FUDDLE</title>
<p>Drink. <eg>This is rum Fuddle</eg>,
this is excellent Tipple.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink,person"><title>FUDDLE-<i>Cap</i></title>
<p>a Drunkard.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime" sortas="FUN 01"><title>FUN</title>
<p>a Cheat, or slippery Trick;
<eg>What do you fun me?</eg> Do you think to
sharp or trick me? <eg>He put the fun upon
the Cull</eg>, he sharped the Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing" sortas="FUN 01"><title>FUN</title>
<p>is also used for the Backside;
as, <eg>I'll kick your Fun</eg>, <i>i. e.</i> I'll kick your
Breech. Likewise for Game of Diversion;
as <eg>We had rare Fun with him</eg>.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>FUNK</title>
<p>Tobacco Smoak.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>FUR-<i>Men</i></title>
<p>Aldermen.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>FUSSOCKS</title>
<p>as <eg>A meer Fussocks</eg>, a lazy
fat wench. <eg>A fat Fussocks</eg>, a fat fulsom,
strapping Woman.</p></entry>
<!--* col *-->
<entry c="person"><title>FUSTILUGGS</title>
<p>a fulsom, beastly,
nasty Woman.</p></entry>
</letter>
<letter name="g" pagesize="big"><title>G</title>
<entry c="crime"><title>GAG</title>
<p>to put iron pins into the
Mouths of the Robbed, to hinder
them from crying out.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GAGE</title>
<p>a Pot or Pipe. <eg>Tip me a Gage</eg>,
give me a Pot or Pipe.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,bawd"><title>GAME</title>
<p>Bubbles drawn in to be
cheated; also at a Bawdy house, lewd
Women. <eg>Have ye any Game Mother</eg>?
Have ye any Whores, Mistress bawd.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GAN</title>
<p>a Mouth.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GANS</title>
<p>the Lips.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>GANG</title>
<p>an ill Knot or Crew of
Thieves, Pick-pockets or Miscreants.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GAOL&stress;ERS-<i>Coach</i></title>
<p>a Hurdle.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>GARNISH-<i>Money</i></title>
<p>what is customarily
spent among the Prisoners at first
coming in.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>GEE</title>
<p>as <eg>It won't Gee</eg>, it won't hit,
or go.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>GELT</title>
<title>or <i>Gelt</i> [sic]</title>
<p>Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>GENTRY-<i>Cove</i></title>
<p>a Gentleman.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>GENTRY-<i>Cove-Ken</i></title>
<p>a Nobleman's
or Gentleman's House.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>GENTRY-<i>Mort</i></title>
<p>a Gentlewoman.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>GEORGE</title>
<p>a Half-Crown piece.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GIG</title>
<p>a Nose; also a Woman's Privities.
<eg>Snichel the Gig</eg>, fillip the Fellow
on the Nose. <eg>A young Gig</eg>, a wanton
Lass.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GIGGER</title>
<p>a Door, <eg>Dub the Gigger,
that we may ravage the Ken</eg>, i. e. Open
the Door with the Pick-lock, that we
go in and rob the House.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>GIG&stress;GLERS</title>
<p>wanton Women.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink,person"><title>GILL</title>
<p>a Quartern (of Brandy, Wine
&c;) also a homely Woman.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,bawd"><title>GILL-FLURT</title>
<p>a proud Minks; also
a Slut or light Housewife.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>GILT</title>
<title>or <i>Rum dubber</i></title>
<p>a Picklock, so
called from <i>Gilt</i>, or <i>Key</i>; may of them
are so expert, that from a Church-Door,
to the smallest Cabinet or Trunk
they will find means to open it. They
generally pretending Business of Secrecy,
covet to go up Stairs with their
Company, in a Publick-House or Tavern,
and then prying about, open any
Door, Trunk or Cabinet that they
think will afford them Booty, and so
march off.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>GIMCRACK</title>
<p>a spruce Wench.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>GINGER-<i>Bread</i></title>
<p>Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>GINGERLY</title>
<p>gently, soft, easily.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GINGUMBOBS</title>
<p>Toys or Baubles.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GINNY</title>
<p>an Instrument to lift up a
Grate, the better to steal what is in the
Window.</p></entry>
<!--* page 14 *-->
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> GLAVER</title>
<p>to fawn and flatter.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GLAZE</title>
<p>a Window.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>GLAZIER</title>
<p>one that creeps in at
Casements, or unrips Glass-Windows
to filch and steal.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GLAZIERS</title>
<p>Eyes. <eg>The Cove has
rum Glaziers</eg>.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>GLIB</title>
<p>smooth, without a Rub.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing,punishment"><title>GLIM</title>
<p>a Dark-Lanthorn used in robbing
Houses; also to burn in the Hand
as <eg>if the Cull was Glimmed, he'll gang to
the Nub</eg>; i.e. if the Fellow has been
burnt in the Hand, he'll be hanged
now.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>GLIMFENDERS</title>
<p>Andirons. <eg>Rum
Glimfenders</eg>, silver Andirons.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>GLIMFLASHY</title>
<p>angry, or in a Passion.
<eg>The Cull is glimflashy</eg>, the Fellow is in
a Heat.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>GLIMJACK</title>
<p>a Link-boy.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GLIMMER</title>
<p>Fire.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>GLIMMERER</title>
<p>such as with sham
Licences, pretend to Losses by Fire
&c;</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GLIMSTICK</title>
<p>a Candle-stick. <eg>Rum
Glimsticks</eg>, Silver Candlesticks. <eg>Queer
Glimsticks</eg>, Brass, Pewter or Iron Candlesticks.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>GOADS</title>
<p>those that wheedle in Chapmen
for Horse-coursers.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>GOAT</title>
<p>a Letcher, or very lascivious
Person.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>GOATISH</title>
<p>letcherous, wanton, lustfull.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing,person"><title>GOB</title>
<p>the Mouth; also a Bit or
Morsel; hence <i>Gobbets</i>, now in use for
Bits; <eg>Gift of the Gob</eg>, a wide, open
Mouth; also a good Songster, or Singing
Master.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GOBBLER</title>
<p>a Turkey-Cock.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>GOING <i>upon the Dub</i></title>
<p>Breaking a
House with Picklocks.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>GOLD-<i>Droppers</i></title>
<p>Sweetners, Cheats,
Sharpers.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>GOLD-<i>Finch</i></title>
<p>he that has often a
Purse of Gold in his Fob.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>GOLD-<i>Finders</i></title>
<p>Emptiers of Jakes or
Houses of Office.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>GOOD <i>Fellow</i></title>
<p>a Pot Companion or
Friend of the Bottle.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GOOSE</title>
<title>or <i>Goose cap</i></title>
<p>a Fool. <eg>A
Taylors Goose roasted</eg>, a Red-hot
smoothing Iron, to close the seams.
<eg>Hot and heavy like a Taylors Goose</eg>. applied
to a passionate Coxcomb.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>GOREE</title>
<p>Money but chiefly Gold.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>GRAFTED</title>
<p>made a Cuckold of.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GRANNAM</title>
<p>Corn.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>GREEN <i>Bag</i></title>
<p>a Lawyer.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>GREEN-<i>Gown</i></title>
<p>a throwing of young
Lasses on the Grass, and kissing them.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>GREEN <i>Head</i></title>
<p>a very raw Novice,
<!--* col *-->
or unexperienced Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="money,person"><title>GRIG</title>
<p>a Farthing; <eg>A merry Grig</eg>, a
merry Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GRINDERS</title>
<p>Teeth.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>GROPERS</title>
<p>blind Men.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GROUND-<i>Sweat</i></title>
<p>a Grave.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> GRUB</title>
<p>to eat, to dine, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GRUB</title>
<p>Victuals.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GRUB <i>street-News</i></title>
<p>false, forg'd News.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GRUMBLING <i>of the Gizzard</i></title>
<p>murmuring, muttering, repining.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GRUNTER</title>
<p>a sucking Pig.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GRUNTING-<i>Cheat</i></title>
<p>a Pig.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GRUNTING-<i>Peck</i></title>
<p>Pork.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>GULL</title>
<p>a Cheat.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>GULLED</title>
<p>cheated, rooked, sharped.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>GULL-<i>Gropers</i></title>
<p>a By-stander that
lends Money to the Gamesters.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>GUN</title>
<p>as <eg>He's in the Gun</eg>; he's in Liquor.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title><i>A</i> GUN</title>
<p>a Lie.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>GUNDIGUTS</title>
<p>a fat, pursy Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>GUN-<i>Powder</i></title>
<p>an old Woman.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>GUT-<i>foundered</i></title>
<p>exceeding hungry.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GUTLING</title>
<p>eating much.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>GUTS</title>
<p>a very fat, gross Person.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GUTTER-<i>Lane</i></title>
<p>the Throat.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>GUTTING <i>an House</i></title>
<p>rifling it, clearing it.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>GUTTING <i>an Oyster</i></title>
<p>eating it.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>GUZZLE</title>
<p>Drink.</p></entry>
<entry c="v,drink"><title>GUZZLING</title>
<p>drinking much.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>GYBE</title>
<title><i>or</i> JYBE</title>
<p>any Writing or Pass
sealed.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>GYBING</title>
<p>jeering or jerking</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>GYPSIES</title>
<p>They endeavour to persuade
the Ignorant, that they derive
their Origin from the <i>Egyptians</i>, a People
heretofore very famous for <i>Astronomy</i>,
<i>Natural Magick</i>, the art of <i>Divination</i>,
&c; and therefore are great Pretenders
to <i>Fortune-telling</i>. To colour
their Impostures, they artificially discolour
their Faces, and rove up and
down the Country in a Tatterdemalion
Habit, deluding the ignorant Vulgar,
and often stealing from them what is
not too hot for their Fingers, or too
heavy to carry off.</p>
<p>It is the Custom of these Wretches
to swear all that are admitted into their
Fraternity, by a Form and Articles
annexed into it, administred by the Principal
<i>Maunder</i> or <i>Roguish Strowler</i>, and
which they generally observe inviolably.
The Manner of admitting a
new Member, together with the said
Oath and Articles, are as follows.</p>
<p>The Name of the Person is first
demanded, and a Nick-name is then given
him in its stead, by which he is ever
after called, and in Time, his other
<!--* page 15 *-->
Name is quite forgotten. Then standing
up in the middle of the Fraternity,
and directing his Face to the <i>Dimber-Damber</i>,
or Prince of the Gang, he
swears in this Manner, as is dictated to
him by one of the most experienced,</p>
<blockquote>
<p>I <i>Crank-Cuffin</i> do swear to be a
<i>True Brother</i>, and will in all Things,
obey the Commands of the great
<i>Tawny Prince</i>, and keep his <i>Councel</i>,
and not divulge the Secrets of my
Brethren.</p>
<p>I will never leave nor forsake this
Company, but observe and keep all
the Times of Appointments, either
by Day or by Night, in any Place
whatsoever.</p>
<p>I will not teach any one to cant;
nor will I disclose ought of our
Mysteries to them, although they
flog me to death.</p>
<p>I will take my Prince's Part against
all that shall oppose him, or any of
us, according to the utmost of my
Ability; nor will I suffer him, or
any belonging to us, to be abused by
any strange, <i>Abrams</i>, <i>Rufflers</i>, <i>Hookers</i>,
<i>Palliards</i>, <i>Swadlers</i>, <i>Irish-Toyls</i>,
<i>Swig-men</i>, <i>Whip-Jacks</i>, <i>Jark-men</i>,
<i>Bawdy-Baskets</i>, <i>Dommerars</i>, <i>Clapperdogeons</i>,
<i>Patricoes</i> <i>or</i> <i>Curtals</i>, but will
defend him or them as much as I can
against all other <i>Outlyers</i> whatever.</p>
<p>I will not conceal ought I win out
of <i>Libkins</i>, or from the <i>Ruffmans</i>; but
will preserve it for the Use of the
Company.</p>
<p>Lastly, I will cleave to my <i>Doxy
Wap</i> stiffly, and will bring her Duds,
Margery, Praters, Goblet, Grunting-cheats,
or Tibs of the Buttery, or
anything else I can come at, as <i>Winnings</i>
for her <i>Wappings</i>.</p>
<p>The <i>Canters</i> have, it seems a Tradition,
that from the Three first articles
of this Oath, the first Founders
of a certain boastful, worshipful Fraternity,
who pretend to derive there
Origin from the earliest Times, borrowed
of them, both the Hint and form
of their Establishment. And that their
pretended Derivation from the first
<i>Adam</i>, is a Forgery, it being only from
the first <i>Adam Tiler</i>. See ADAM TILER.</p>
<p>At the Admission of a new Brother,
a general Stock is raised for <i>Booze</i>, or
Drink, to make themselves merry on
the Occasion. As for <i>Peckage</i>, or Eatables,
they can procure it without
Money; for while some are sent to
break the <i>Ruffmans</i>, or Woods and
Bushes, for Firing, others are detached
<!--* col *-->
to filch Geese, Chickens, Hens, Ducks
or Mallards, and Pigs. Their <i>Morts</i>
are their Butchers, who presently make
bloody Work with what living Things
are brought them, and having made
Holes in the Ground, under some remote
Hedge in an obscure Place, they
make a fire, and broil or boil their
Food, and when 'tis enough, fall to
work, Tooth and Nail, and having
eaten more like Beasts than Men, they
drink more like Swine than human
Creatures, entertaining one another
all the Time with Songs in the <i>Canting</i>
Dialect.</p>
<p>As they live, so they lie together promiscuously,
and know not how to claim
a Property either in their Goods or
Children, and this general Interest ties
them more firmly together, than if
all their Rags were twisted into Ropes
to bind them indissolubly from a Separation;
which detestable Union is farther
consolidated by the above Oath.</p>
<p>They strowl up and down all Summertime
in Droves, and dextrously pick
Pockets, while they are telling of Fortunes;
and the Money, Rings, Silver-Thimbles,
&c; which they get, are
instantly conveyed from one Hand, to
another, till the remotest Person of the
Gang, who is not suspected, because
they come not near the Person robbed,
gets Possession of it, so that in the strictest
Search, it is almost impossible to
recover it, while the Wretches with
Imprecations, Oaths and Protestations,
disclaim the Thievery. That by
which they are said to get the most
Money, is, when young Gentlewomen
of good Families and Reputations have
happenned to be with Child before
Marriage, a round Sum is often bestowed
among the <i>Gypsies</i>, for some one
<i>Mort</i> to take the Child; and as that
is never heard of more by the true
Mother and Family, so the Disgrace
is kept concealed from the World, and
if the Child lives, it never known its
Parents.</p></blockquote></entry>
</letter>
<letter name="h"><title>H</title>
<entry c="person"><title>HABERDASHER <i>of Nouns and Pronouns</i></title>
<p>a Schoolmaster or Usher.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>HACK, <i>and Hue</i></title>
<p>to cut in pieces.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>HACKS</title>
<title>or <i>Hackneys</i></title>
<p>Hirelings.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>HACKUM</title>
<p>a fighting Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>HADDUMS</title>
<p><eg>The Shark has been at
Haddams</eg>; He is clapt or poxed.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>HALFBORD</title>
<p>Six-Pence.</p></entry>
<!--* page 16 *-->
<entry c="money"><title>HALF <i>a Hog</i></title>
<p>Six-Pence.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>HALF <i>an Ounce</i></title>
<p>Half a Crown.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>HALF <i>Seas over</i></title>
<p>almost drunk.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>HAMS</title>
<p>Breeches.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>HAMLET</title>
<p>a High Constable.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>HANDY-<i>Blows</i></title>
<p>Fisty-cuffs.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>HANG <i>it up</i></title>
<p>speaking of the Reckoning
at a <i>Bowsing-Ken</i> score it up.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>HANK</title>
<p><eg>He has a Hank upon him</eg>; He
has an Advantage, or will make him do
what he pleases.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>HANKTELO</title>
<p>a silly Fellow, a meer
Codshead.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>HANS-<i>en-Kelder</i></title>
<p>Jack in the Box,
Child in the Womb.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>HARE</title>
<p>as <eg>he has swallowd a Hare</eg>,
he is very drunk.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>HARKING</title>
<p>whispering on one side
to borrow Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>HARMAN</title>
<p>a Constable.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>HARMANS</title>
<p>the Stocks.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>HARMANBECK</title>
<p>a Beadle.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>HARRIDAN</title>
<p>one that is half a
Whore, half a Bawd, also a notorious
Shrew, or noisy old Woman.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>HARTFORDSHIRE <i>Kindness</i></title>
<p>drinking
to the same Man again.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>HATCHET <i>Faced</i></title>
<p>hard favoured,
homely.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>HATCHES</title>
<p>as, <eg>Under the Hatches</eg>, in
Trouble or Prison.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title><i>To</i> HAZLE <i>Geld</i></title>
<p>to beat any one
with a Hazle Stick or Plant.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>HEAD <i>Cully of the Pass</i></title>
<title>or <i>Passage Bank</i></title>
<p>the Top Tilter of that Gang,
throughout the whole Army, who demands
and receives Contribution from
all the Pass-Banks in the Camp.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>HEARING-<i>Cheats</i></title>
<p>Ears.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>HEARTS-<i>Ease</i></title>
<p>a Twenty Shilling
Piece.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>HEATHEN <i>Philosopher</i></title>
<p>a sorry poor
tattered Fellow, whose Breech may
be seen through his Pocket-holes.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> HEAVE</title>
<p>to rob.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>HEAVE <i>a Cough</i></title>
<p>to rob a House.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>HEAVER</title>
<p>the Breast.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>HECTOR</title>
<p>a vapouring, swaggering
Coward.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> HEDGE</title>
<p>to secure a desperate Bet,
Wager or Debt. <eg>By Hedge or by stile</eg>,
by Hook or by Crook.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>HEDGE-<i>Bird</i></title>
<p>a scoundrel or sorry
Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>HEDGE-<i>Creeper</i></title>
<p>a Robber of Hedges.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>HEDGE-<i>Priest</i></title>
<p>a sorry hackney Underling,
an Vagabond. See <i>Patrico</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>HEDGE-<i>Tavern</i></title>
<title>or <i>Alehouse</i></title>
<p>a jilting,
sharping Tavern, or blind Ale-house.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>HELL</title>
<p>the Place where the Taylors
lay up their Cabbage, or Remnants.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>HELL-<i>born-babe</i></title>
<p>a lewd, graceless,
<!--* col *-->
notorious Youth.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>HELL-<i>Cat</i></title>
<p>a very lewd Woman.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>HELL-<i>Driver</i></title>
<p>a Coachman.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>HELL-<i>Hound</i></title>
<p>a profligate, lewd
Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>HEMPEN-<i>Widow</i></title>
<p>one whose Husband
was hanged.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>HEN-<i>peckt-Frigot</i></title>
<p>whose Commander
and Officers are absolutely swayed
by their Wives.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>HENPECT-<i>Husband</i></title>
<p>whose Wife
wears the Breeches.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>HICK</title>
<p>any Person from whom a
Booty is taken, a silly Country Fellow;
a Booby.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd,person"><title>HIGH-<i>Flyers</i></title>
<p>impudent, forward,
loose, light Women, also bold Adventurers.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>HIGHJINKS</title>
<p>a Play at Dice who
Drinks.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>HIGH-PADS</title>
<title><i>Hightway-men</i> or <i>Bully-Ruffians</i></title>
<p>an Order of Villains, and the
boldest of all others. Before they commence,
they furnish themselves, with
good Horses, Swords, Pistols, &c; and
sometimes singly, but mostly in Company,
commit their execrable Robberies.
They have a Vizor-Mask, and two or
three Perukes of different Colours and
Make, the better to conceal themselves.
When they meet a Prize upon the
Road, they have a Watch-Word,
among them, which is no sooner pronounced,
but every one falls on. It is
usually the Rule among them, that the
strongest and bold seize first; the
Weaker generally bid <i>stand</i>, and fall
in afterwards as Occasion requires. The
Instructions given them are, to catch
the Bridle in the Left-Hand, and to
have the Sword or Pistol in the Right,
and, if Opposition be made, or they
are likely to be overpowered to kill
as fast as they can, and then, either
with Booty or without, to make off
with all Expedition; and if they are
pursued by an <i>Hue or Cry</i>, to conceal
themselves in some By place, and let
it pass by them.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>HIGH-<i>Shoon</i></title>
<title>or <i>Clouted-Shoon</i></title>
<p>a
Country Clown.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>A HIGHTE-TITY</title>
<p>a Romp or rude Girl.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>HIGH <i>Tide</i></title>
<p>when the Pocket is full of Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>HOB</title>
<p>a plain Country Fellow or Clown.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>HOBINAL</title>
<p>the same [[as <i>Hob</i>]].</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>HOBBY</title>
<p>as Sir <eg>Posthumus Hobby</eg>, one
that draws on his Breeches with a
Shoeing-horn; a Fellow that is nice
and whimsical in the Set of his Cloaths.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>HOB <i>Nail</i></title>
<p>a <i>High-shoon</i> or Country
Clown.</p></entry>
<!--* page 17 *-->
<entry c="drink"><title>HOCUS</title>
<p>disguised in Liquor; drunk.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>HODGE-<i>Podge</i></title>
<p>see <i>Hotch-Potch</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>HOG</title>
<p>a Shilling; <eg>You Darkman
Budge, will you Fence your Hog at the
next Boozing Ken?</eg> you House-Creeper,
will you spend your Shilling at the
next Ale-house.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>HOG-<i>Grubber</i></title>
<p>a close-fisted, narrow
soul'd sneaking Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="phrase"><title>HOLD <i>his Nose to the Grind-stone</i></title>
<p>to
keep him under, or tie him Neck and
Heels into the Bargain.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,thing"><title>HOLIDAY-<i>Bowler</i></title>
<p>a very bad Bowler.
<eg>Blind Man's Holiday</eg>, when it is Night.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>HONEY-<i>Moon</i></title>
<p>the first Month of Marriage.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>HOOD-<i>wink'd</i></title>
<p>Blind-folded or Bluffed.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> HOOF <i>it</i></title>
<title>or <i>beat it on the Hoof</i></title>
<p>to walk on Foot.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>HOOKERS</title>
<p>See <i>Anglers</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>HOOKT</title>
<p>over reached, snapt,
trikt.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>HOP-<i>Merchant</i></title>
<p>a Dancing-master.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>HORN <i>mad</i></title>
<p>stark staring mad because
Cuckolded.</p></entry>
<entry c="phrase,drink"><title><i>It revives the</i> COCKLES <i>of my Heart</i></title>
<p>said of agreeable News, or a Cup of
Comfort, Wine or Cordial Water.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title><i>In</i> HUCKSTER'S <i>Hands</i></title>
<p>at a desperate
Pass, or Condition, or in a fair
way to be lost.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>HUED</title>
<p>severely lash'd or flogg'd.
<eg>The Cove was Hued in the Naskin</eg>, The
Rogue was severely lash'd in <i>Bridewell</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title><i>A</i> HUFF</title>
<p>a Bullying Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>HULVER <i>head</i></title>
<p>a silly, foolish Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>HUM-<i>Box</i></title>
<p>a Pulpit.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>HUM-<i>Cap</i></title>
<p>old, mellow, and very
strong Beer.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>HUM-<i>Drums</i></title>
<title>or <i>Hums</i></title>
<p>a Society of
Gentlemen, who meet near the <i>Charter-House</i>,
or at the <i>King's Head</i> in St.
<i>John's Street</i>. Less of Mystery, and
more of Pleasantry than the <i>Free Masons</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>HUMMING <i>Liquor</i></title>
<p>Double Ale,
Stout, Pharaoh.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>HUMMER</title>
<p>a great Lye, a Rapper.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>HUMMUMS</title>
<p>a Bagnio.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>HUMPTEY-<i>Dumptey</i></title>
<p>Ale boil'd with
Brandy.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>HUMS</title>
<p>Persons at Church; as, <eg>There
is a great Number of Hums in the Autem</eg>;
i. e. There is a great Congregation.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>HUNTING</title>
<p>decoying, or drawing
others into Play.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>HUSH'D</title>
<p>murder'd, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>HUSH <i>Money</i></title>
<p>Money given to <i>hush
up</i>, or conceal a Robbery or Theft, or
<!--* col *-->
to take off an Evidence from appearing
against a Criminal, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>HUSKY-<i>Lour</i></title>
<p>a Jobs, or Guinea.</p></entry>
</letter>
<letter name="ij"><title>I, J</title>
<entry c="money"><title>JACK</title>
<p>a Farthing; <eg>He wou'd not
tip me a Jack</eg>, Not a Farthing
wou'd he give me.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>JACK-ADAMS Parish</title>
<p><i>Clerkenwell</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>JACK <i>in a Box</i></title>
<p>a Sharper, or Cheat.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>JACKMEN</title>
<p>See <i>Jarkmen</i></p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>JACK-<i>sprat</i></title>
<p>a Dwarf, or very little
Fellow, a Hop on my-thumb.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>JACK <i>at a Pinch</i></title>
<p>a poor Hackney
Parson.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>JACOBITES</title>
<p>Sham or Collar Shirts.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>JAGUE</title>
<p>a Ditch.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>JANIZARIES</title>
<p>the Mob, sometimes
so called, and Bailiffs, Serjeants-Followers,
yeomen, Setters, and any
lewd Gang depending upon others.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>JARKE</title>
<p>a Seal.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>JARKE-MEN</title>
<p>Those who make
Counterfeit Licences and Passes, and
are well paid by the other Beggars for
their Pains.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>JASON'<i>s Fleece</i></title>
<p>a Citizen cheated of
his Gold.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>JAYL <i>Birds</i></title>
<p>Prisoners.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>JEM</title>
<p>a Gold Ring; <eg>Rum-Jem</eg>, a
Diamond one.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>JENNY</title>
<p>an Instrument to lift up
a Grate, and whip any thing out of a
Shop-window.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>JET</title>
<p>a Lawyer.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title><i>Autem</i> JET</title>
<p>a Parson.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,rogue"><title>JEW</title>
<p>any over-reaching Dealer, or
hard sharp Fellow. <eg>He treated me like
a Jew</eg>; He used me very barbarously.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>JEWS</title>
<p>Brokers behind St. <i>Clement'</i>s
Church in <i>London</i>, so called by (their
Brethren) the Taylors.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>JIG</title>
<p>a Trick; <eg>A pleasant Jig</eg>, a witty
arch Trick.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>JILT</title>
<p>a tricking Woman.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>JILTED</title>
<p>abused by such a one [[i.e. by a JILT]]; also
deceived or defeated in one's Expectation,
expecially in Amours.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>JINGLE-<i>Boxes</i></title>
<p>Leathern Jacks tipt
and hung with Silver Bells, formerly
in use among Fuddle-caps.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>JINGLERS</title>
<p>Horse-Coursers frequenting
Country Fairs.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>JINGLE <i>Brains</i></title>
<p>a Maggot-pated
Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="money" sortas="JLL"><title>ILL <i>Fortune</i></title>
<p>a Nine-pence.</p></entry>
<!--* page 18 *-->
<entry c="rogue"><title>IMPOST-TAKER</title>
<p>one that stands by,
and lends Money to the Gamester at a
very high Interest or Premium.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>INCHING-<i>In</i></title>
<p>Encroaching upon.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>INLAYED</title>
<p><eg>Well inlayed</eg>, at Ease in
his Fortune, or full of Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>JOBE</title>
<p>a Guinea, Twenty Shillings,
or a Piece. <eg>Half a Jobe</eg>, Half a Guinea.</p></entry>
<entry c="v,bawd"><title>JOCK</title>
<title>or <i>Jockum cloy</i></title>
<p>to copulate
with a Woman.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>JUCKUM-<i>Gage</i></title>
<p>a Chamberpot. <eg>Tip
me the Jockum-Gage</eg>, Give or hand me
the Looking-Glass. <eg>Rum Jockum-Gage</eg>,
a Silver Chamber-Pot.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>JORDAIN</title>
<p>a great Blow or Staff;
also a Chamber-Pot. <eg>I'll tip him a Jordain,
if I transnear</eg>; I will give him a
Blow with my Staff, if I get up to him.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>JOSEPH</title>
<p>a Cloak or Coat. <eg>A Rum
Joseph</eg>, a good Cloak or Coat. <eg>A Queer
Joseph</eg>, a coarse ordinary Cloak or
Coat; also an old or tatter'd One.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>IRISH-<i>Toyles</i></title>
<p>Rogues &c; carrying
Pins, Points, Laces, and such like
Wares about, and, under pretence of
selling them, commit Thefts and Robberies.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>IRON-<i>Doublet</i></title>
<p>a Prison.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>ITCH-<i>Land</i></title>
<p><i>Scotland</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>JUKRUM</title>
<p>a Licence.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>JUMBLE-<i>Gut-Lane</i></title>
<p>any very bad or
rough Road.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>JUSTICE</title>
<p><eg>I'll do Justice, Child</eg>; I
will Peach, or rather Impeach, or
discover the whole Gang, and so save
my own Bacon.</p></entry>
</letter>
<letter name="k"><title>K</title>
<entry c="rogue"><title>KATE</title>
<p>a Pick-lock. <eg>'Tis a Rum kate</eg>; She is a clever Pick-lock.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>KEEL-<i>Bullies</i></title>
<p>Lightermen that carry
coals to and from the Ships, so called
in Derision.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>KEEPING <i>Cully</i></title>
<p>one that maintains
a Mistress, and parts with his Money
very generously to her.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>KEFFAL</title>
<p>a Horse.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>KELTER</title>
<p>as, <eg>Out of Kelter</eg>, Out of
sorts.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>KEN</title>
<p>a House. <eg>A bob-Ken</eg>, or <eg>a
Bowman-ken</eg>, a good or well furnished
House; also a House that harbours
Rogues and Thieves. <eg>Biting the Ken</eg>,
robbing the House, <eg>'tis a bob Ken, Brush
upon the Sneak</eg>, i.e., 'Tis a good House,
go in and tread softly. <eg>We have bit the
Ken</eg>, The House is robb'd, or the Business
is done.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>KEN-<i>Miller</i></title>
<p>a House-breaker, who
usually, by getting into an empty
<!--* col *-->
House, finds Means to enter into the
Gutters of Houses inhabited, and so
in at the Windows, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>KICK</title>
<p>Six-pence: <eg>Two, Three, Four,
&c; and a Kick</eg>; Two, Three, Four,
&c; Shillings and Six-pence.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>KICK'D</title>
<p>gone, fled, departed; as,
<eg>The Rum Cull kick'd away</eg>, i.e. The
Rogue made his Escape.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>KICKS</title>
<p>Breeches. <eg>Tip us your Kicks,
we'll have them as well as your Lour</eg>;
Pull off your Breeches, for we must
have them as well as your Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>KID</title>
<p>a Child.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>KIDLAYS</title>
<p>an Order of Rogues, who
meeting a Youth with a Bundle or
Parcel of Goods, wheedle him by fair
Words, and whipping Six-pence into
his Hand, to step on a short and sham
Errand, in the mean Time run away
with the Goods.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>KIDNAPPER</title>
<p>one that decoys or
spirits (as it is commonly called) Children
away, and sells them for the
Plantations.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>KILKENNY</title>
<p>an old sorry Frize
Coat.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>KILL-<i>Devil</i></title>
<p>Rum.</p></entry>
<entry c="v,punishment,crime"><title><i>To</i> KIMBAW</title>
<p>to Trick, Sharp, or
Cheat; also to Beat severely, or to
Bully. <eg>Let's Kimbaw the Cull</eg>, Let's
beat that Fellow, and get his Money
(by huffing and bullying) from him.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>KIN</title>
<p>a Thief: <eg>He's one of the Kin,
let him pike</eg>; said of a Brother Rogue
whom one of the Gang knows to be a
Villain, tho' not one of their own
Crew.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>KINCHIN</title>
<p>a little Child.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>KINCHIN-<i>Coves</i></title>
<p>little Children whose
Parents are dead, having been Beggars;
as also young Lads running from their
Masters, who are first taught Canting,
then Thieving.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>KINCHIN <i>Cove</i></title>
<p>a little Man.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>KINCHIN-<i>Morts</i></title>
<p>Girls of a Year or
two old, whom the <i>Morts</i> (their Mothers)
carry at their Backs in <i>Slates</i>
(<i>Sheets</i>) and if they have no Children
of thir own, they borrow or steal
them from others.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>KING <i>of the Gypsies</i></title>
<p>the Captain,
Chief, or Ringleader of the Gang, the
Master of Misrule, otherwise called
<i>Uprightman</i>. Vide <i>Gypsies</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>KING<i>'s Head Inn</i></title>
<title>or <i>the Chequer Inn in Newgate-street</i></title>
<p>the Prison of <i>Newgate</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>KING<i>'s Pictures</i></title>
<p>Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>KIT</title>
<p>a Dancing Master.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title><i>A</i> KNACK <i>Shop</i></title>
<p>a Toy-shop,
freighted with pretty Devices to pick
Pockets.</p></entry>
<!--* page 19 *-->
<entry c="person"><title>KNAVE <i>in Grain</i></title>
<p>one of the First
Rate.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>KNIGHT <i>of the Blade</i></title>
<p>a Hector or
Bully.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>KNIGHT <i>of the Post</i></title>
<p>a mercenary
common Swearer, a Prostitute to every
Cause, an Irish Evidence.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>KNIGHT <i>of the Road</i></title>
<p>the chief
Highwayman, best mounted and armed,
the stoutest Fellow among them.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>KNOB</title>
<p>the Head or Skull.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>KNOCK <i>Down</i></title>
<p>very strong Ale or
Beer.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> KNOCK <i>off</i></title>
<p>to give over Thieving.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>KNOT</title>
<p>a Crew of Gang of Villains.</p></entry>
<!--* end of K *-->
</letter>
<letter name="l"><title>L</title>
<entry c="person"><title>LAC'D <i>Mutton</i></title>
<p>a Woman</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>LACING</title>
<p>beating, drubbing;
<eg>I'll Lace your Coat, Sirrah!</eg> I will beat
you soundly!</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>LADY</title>
<p>a very crooked, deformed
and ill-shapen Woman.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>LADY-birds</title>
<p>light, or lewd Women.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>LAG</title>
<p>Water; also last.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>LAG <i>a-dudds</i></title>
<p>a Buck of Cloths; as,
<eg>We'll cloy the Lag of Dudds</eg>: Come, let
us steal that Buck of Cloths.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title><i>To</i> LAMBASTE</title>
<p>to beat soundly.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>LAMB-<i>Pye</i></title>
<p>beating or drubbing.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>LAMB-<i>Skin Men</i></title>
<p>the Judges of the
several Courts.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>LAND-<i>Lopers</i></title>
<title>or <i>Land-lubbers</i></title>
<p>Vagabonds that beg and steal about the
Country.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>LAND <i>Pyrates</i></title>
<p>Highwaymen or any
other Robbers.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>LAND</title>
<p>as, <eg>How lies the Land?</eg> How
stands the Reckoning? <eg>Who has any
Land in Appleby?</eg> a Question ask'd the
Man, at whose Door the Glass stands
long.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>LANSPRESADO</title>
<p>He that comes into
Company with but Two-pence in
his Pocket.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>LANTERN-<i>jaw'd</i></title>
<p>a very lean, thin-faced Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title><i>A Dark</i> LANTHORN</title>
<p>the Servant
or Agent that receives the Bribe (at
Court).</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>LAP</title>
<p>Pottage, Butter-milk, or Whey.</p></entry>
<entry c="phrase"><title>LARE-<i>Over</i></title>
<p>said when the true
Name of the Things must (in Decency)
be concealed.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>LATCH</title>
<p>let in.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>LAY</title>
<p>an Enterprize, or Attempt;
<eg>To be sick of the Lay</eg>, to be tir'd in
<!--* col *-->
waiting for an Opportunity to effect
their Purposes. Also an Hazard or
Chance; as, <eg>He stands a quuer Lay</eg>; he
stands an odd Chance, or is in great
Danger.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>LAY'D <i>Up in Lavender</i></title>
<p>pawn'd or
dipt for present Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>LEATHER-<i>Head</i></title>
<p>a Thick-skill'd,
heavy-headed Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>LEATHERN <i>Convenience</i></title>
<p>(by the Quakers) a Coach.</p></entry>
<entry c="phrase"><title>LET<i>'s take an Ark and Winns</i></title>
<p>Let's
hire a Skuller.</p></entry>
<entry c="phrase"><title>LET<i>'s buy a Brush</i></title>
<title>or <i>Let's lope</i></title>
<p>Let us scour off, and make what Shift we
can to secure our selves from being
apprehended.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>LEVITE</title>
<p>a Priest or Parson.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title><i>To</i> LIB</title>
<p>to tumble or lie together.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>LIBBEN</title>
<p>a private Dwelling-House.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>LIBBEGE</title>
<p>a Bed.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>LIBKIN</title>
<p>a House to lie in; also a
Lodging.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>LICKT</title>
<p>as Women's Faces with a
Wash.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>LIFTER</title>
<p>a Crutch.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>LIG</title>
<p>See <i>Lib</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>LIGHT <i>Finger'd</i></title>
<p>Thievish.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>LIGHT-<i>Mans</i></title>
<p>the Day or Day-break.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd,rogue"><title>LIGHT-<i>Frigate</i></title>
<p>a Whore; also a
Cruiser.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>LILLY <i>White</i></title>
<p>a Chimney-Sweeper.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>LINE <i>of the old Author</i></title>
<p>a Dram of
Brandy.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>LINNEN <i>Armorers</i></title>
<p>Taylors.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>LITTLE <i>Barbary</i></title>
<p>Wapping.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>LOAP'D</title>
<p>run away; <eg>He loap'd up the
Dancers</eg>; He whipt up the Stairs.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>LOB-<i>Cock</i></title>
<p>a heavy, dull Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title><i>In</i> LOB<i>'s Pound</i></title>
<p>laid by the Heels,
or clap'd up in Jail.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>LOBSTER</title>
<p>a red Coat Soldier.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>LOCK</title>
<p>as, <eg>He stood a queer Lock</eg>;
i.e. He stood an indifferent Chance,
&c;</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>LOCK <i>all fast</i></title>
<p>one that buys and
conceals stollen Goods.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title><i>The</i> LOCK</title>
<p>the Warehouse whither
the Thieves carry stollen Goods. Also
an Hospital for pocky Folks in <i>Southwark</i> &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>LOCKRAM <i>Jaw'd</i></title>
<p>thin, lean,
sharp-visag'd</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>LODGE</title>
<p>a Watch. <eg>As Files a Cly
of a Lodge, or Scout</eg>, Pickt a Pocket of
a Watch. <eg>Biting a Loge, or Scout</eg>,
the same.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>LOLPOOP</title>
<p>a lazy, idle Droe.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>LONG-<i>Meg</i></title>
<p>a very tall Woman.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>LONG-<i>Shanks</i></title>
<p>long-legged.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>LOOKING-<i>Glass</i></title>
<p>a Chamber-pot.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title><i>A</i> LOON</title>
<p>a Lout. <eg>A false Loon</eg>, a
<!--* page 20 *-->
true <i>Scotch</i> Man; or Knave of any Nation.
</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>LOON-<i>Slate</i></title>
<p>a Thirteen-pence
Half-penny.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>LORD</title>
<p>a very crooked deformed, or
ill-shapen Person.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>LOUR</title>
<p>Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>LOUSE <i>Land</i></title>
<p>Scotland.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>LOUSE <i>Trap</i></title>
<p>a Comb.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>LOW <i>Pad</i></title>
<p>a <i>Foot-Pad</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>LOW <i>Tide</i></title>
<p>when there's no Money
in a Man's Pocket.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>LUD'<i>s Bulwark</i></title>
<p>Ludgate Prison.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>LUGGS</title>
<p>Ears.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>LULLABY-<i>Cheat</i></title>
<p>a Child.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>LUMB</title>
<p>too much.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>LURCHED</title>
<p>beaten at any Game.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>LURRIES</title>
<p>Money, Watches, Rings,
or other Moveables.</p></entry>
</letter>
<letter name="m"><title>M</title>
<entry c="bawd"><title>Mackarel</title>
<p>a Bawd.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>MACKAREL-<i>Back</i></title>
<p>a very
tall, lank Person.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>MADAM <i>Van</i></title>
<p>a Whore; <eg>The Cull
has been with Madam Van</eg>, the Fellow
has enjoyed such a one.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>MADE</title>
<p>stolen. <eg>I made this Knife
at a Heat</eg>, I stole it cleverly.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>MAD <i>Tom</i></title>
<p>alias of Bedlam; otherwise
called <i>Abram-men</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>MAIDEN-<i>Sessions</i></title>
<p>when none are hang'd.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title link="ignore">MAKE</title>
<p>a Half-penny.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title link="ignore"><i>To</i> MAKE</title>
<p>to steal; seize; to run
away with.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>MALKINTRASH</title>
<p>one in a rueful
Dress, enough to fright one.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>MALMSEY-Nose</title>
<p>a jolly red Nose.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>MAN <i>o'th' Town</i></title>
<p>a lewd Spark, or
very Debauchee.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>MANUFACTURE</title>
<p>any Liquor made
of the Fruits of <i>English</i> Growth, as
Ale, Beer, Cyder, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>MARGERY <i>Prater</i></title>
<p>a Hen.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>MARINATED</title>
<p>transported into
some Foreign Plantation.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>MARRIAGE <i>Musick</i></title>
<p>Childrens Cries.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>MASONS <i>Mawn'd</i></title>
<p>a Sham Sore
above the Elbow; to counterfeit a
broken Arm, by a Fall from a Scaffold.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink,punishment"><title>MAUL'D</title>
<p>swinglingly drunk, or
soundly beat.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>MAUNDERS</title>
<p>Beggars</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>MAUNDING</title>
<p>begging.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>MAUNDRING-<i>Broth</i></title>
<p>Scolding.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>MAWDLIN</title>
<p>weepingly drunk.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>MEGGS</title>
<p>Guineas. <eg>We fork'd the
rum Cull's Meggs to the Tune of Fifty</eg>;
<!--* col *-->
We pickt the Gentleman's Pocket of
full Fifty Guineas.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title><i>To</i> MELT</title>
<p>to spend Money. <eg>Will
you melt a Borde?</eg> Will you spend your
Shilling? <eg>The Cull melted a Couple of
Decusses upon us</eg>; The Gentleman spent
Ten Shillings upon us.</p></entry>
<entry c="phrase"><title>MILCH-<i>Kine</i></title>
<p>a Term used by Goalers,
when their Prisoners will bleed
freely to have some Favour, or to be
at large.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> MILL</title>
<p>to steal, rob, or kill. <eg>ill
the Gig with a Dub</eg>, open the Door
with a Pick-lock, or false Key.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> MILL <i>a Bleating Cheat</i></title>
<p>to kill a
Sheep.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>MILL-<i>Clapper</i></title>
<p>a Woman's Tongue.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> MILL <i>a Crackmans</i></title>
<p>to break a
Hedge.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> MILL <i>a Grunter</i></title>
<p>to kill a Pig.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> MILL <i>a Ken</i></title>
<p>to rob a House.
<eg>Milling the Gig with a Betty</eg>, Breaking
open the Door with an Iron Crow.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>MILL-<i>Ken</i></title>
<p>a House-Breaker.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>MILL <i>the Glaze</i></title>
<p>break open the
Window.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>MILL <i>Them</i></title>
<p>kill them.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>MILLER</title>
<p>a Killer or Murderer.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>MINT</title>
<p>Gold.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>MISH</title>
<p>Shirt, Smock, or Sheet.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>MISH <i>Topper</i></title>
<p>a Coat or Petticoat.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>MISS</title>
<p>a Whore of Quality.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>MOABITES</title>
<p>Serjeants, Bailiffs and
their Crew.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>MOB</title>
<title>or MAB</title>
<p>a Wench or Harlot.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>MONGREL</title>
<p>a Hanger-on among
the Cheats, a Spunger.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>MOON-<i>Curser</i></title>
<p>a Link-boy, or one
that, under Colour of lighting Men,
(especially they who get in Drink, or
have the Fields, or any uninhabited or
By place, to go over) robs or leads
them to a Gang of Rogues, that will
do it for him.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>MOON-<i>Men</i></title>
<p>Gypsies.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>MOPSIE</title>
<p>a Dowdy, or homely
Woman.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>MOP'D</title>
<p>maz'd.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>MOPUS</title>
<p>a Half-penny or Farthing.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>MORGLAG</title>
<p>a Watchman's brown
Bill; as Glaives, are Bills or Swords.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title><i>To</i> MORRIS</title>
<p>to hang dangling in the
Air, to be executed.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,bawd"><title>MORTS</title>
<p>Yeomans Daughters; also
a Wife, Woman, or Wench.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>MOTHER</title>
<p>a Bawd.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,bawd"><title>MOTHER <i>Midnight</i></title>
<p>a Midwife (often a Bawd).</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>MOVEABLES</title>
<p>Rings, Watches,
Swords, and such Toys of Value.</p></entry>
<!--* page 21 *-->
<entry c="thing"><title>MOUSE-<i>Trap</i></title>
<p>as <eg>The Parson's
Mouse-Trap</eg>, Marriage.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>MOUTH</title>
<p>a noisy Fellow. <eg>Mouth
half cockt</eg>, gaping and staring at every
Thing they see.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>MOWER</title>
<p>a Cow.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>MOW-<i>Heater</i></title>
<p>a Drover.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>MUCK</title>
<p>Money, Wealth.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>MUFF</title>
<p>a Woman's Secrets, <eg>To the
well wearing of your Muff, Mort</eg>; To
the happy Consummation of your Marriage,
Madam. A Health.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>MUFFLING-<i>Cheat</i></title>
<p>a Napkin.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>MUM <i>for-that</i></title>
<p>not a Word of the
Pudding.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>MUM <i>Chance</i></title>
<p>one that fits mute.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>MUM <i>Glass</i></title>
<p>the Monument, erected
at the City Charge, in Memory of the
dreadful Fire 1666, which consumed
the greatest part of the City.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>MUMPERS</title>
<p>genteel Beggars, who
will not accept of Victuals, but of
Money or Cloaths. The <i>Male Mumper</i>
often appears with an Apron before
him, and a Cap on his Head, pretending
to be a decayed Tradesman, who having
been a long Time sick, hath spent
all his remaining Stock, ans is so weak
he cannot work. At other times he
appears like a decayed Gentleman, who,
especially since the fatal <i>South Sea
Scheme</i>, has been undine, and reduced
to the Necessity of imploring good People's Charity.</p>
<p>The <i>Female Mumper</i> will confidently
knock at the Door of a House, and desire
to speak with the Mistress, and
after apologizing for her Boldness, she
acquaints her how urgent her Necessity
is: That she has a Husband and two
small Children lying at the Point of
Death: That she was a Gentlewoman
born; but marrying against her Friends
Consent, was by them disowned, and
so by her Husbands Sickness, is reduced
to this miserable Condition. Sometimes
she appears big with Child, and
begs Cloaths or Linnen to make Clouts
of. The Word <i>Mumper</i> is now generally
used to denote all sorts of Beggars.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>MUMPERS <i>Hall</i></title>
<p>several Ale-houses
in and about this City and Suburbs, in
Alleys, and By-places, much used by
them, and resorted to in the Evening,
where they will be very merry, drunk,
and frolicksome.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>MUNNS</title>
<p>the Face; <eg>Toute his Munns</eg>,
Note his Phiz, or, Mark his Face well.
<eg>Pay his Munns</eg>, i.e. Strike him in the
Face, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="phrase"><title>MUSICK</title>
<p>the Watch-word among
High-way-men, to let the Company
<!--* col *-->
they were to rob, alone, in return to
some Courtesy from some Gentleman
among them.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>MUTTON <i>Monger</i></title>
<p>a Lover of
Women; also a Sheep-stealer.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>MUTTON-<i>in-long-coats</i></title>
<p>Women
<eg>A Leg of Mutton in a Silk Stocking</eg>, a
Woman's leg.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>MUZZLE</title>
<p>a beard, (usually) long
and nasty.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>MYRMIDONS</title>
<p>the Constable's Attendants,
or those whom he commands
(in the King's Name) to aid and assist
him: Also the Watchmen.</p></entry>
</letter>
<letter name="n"><title>N</title>
<entry c="v"><title>NAB</title>
<p>a Hat, Cap, or Head, also a
Coxcomb. <eg>Ill nab ye</eg>, I'll have
your Hat or Cap. <eg>Nim the Nab</eg>, steal
the Hat or Cap. <eg>Nabbed</eg>, apprehended,
taken or arrested.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>NAB <i>Cheat</i></title>
<p>a Hat.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>NAB-<i>Girder</i></title>
<p>a Bridle.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>NAN</title>
<p>a Servant-maid.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>NANNY-<i>House</i></title>
<p>a Bawdy-house.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> NAP</title>
<p>by cheating with the Dice
to ecure one chance; also a Clap or
Pox, and a short sleep, <eg>Nap the Wiper</eg>,
steal the Hankerchief. <eg>You have napt
it</eg>, You are Clapt.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>NAPPER</title>
<p>a Cheat, or Thief.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>NAPPER</title>
<p><i>of Naps</i>, a sheep-stealer.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>NAPPY-<i>Ale</i></title>
<p>very strong, heady.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>NASK</title>
<title>or <i>Naskin</i></title>
<p>a Prison or Bridewell.
<eg>The new Nask</eg>, Clerkenwell
Bridewell: <eg>Tuttle Nask</eg>, the Bridewell
in Tuttle-Fields: <eg>He napt it at the
Nask</eg>; he was lasht at Bridewell.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>NATURAL</title>
<p>a Mistress, a Wench.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>NAY-<i>Word</i></title>
<p>a By-word, or Proverb.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>NAZIE</title>
<p>Drunken.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>NAZIE-<i>Cove</i></title>
<p>a Drunkard.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>NAZY-<i>Mort</i></title>
<p>a she Drunkard.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>NAZY-<i>Nabs</i></title>
<p>Drunken Coxcombs.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,drink"><title>NECK-<i>Stamper</i></title>
<p>the Pot-Boy at a
Tavern or Ale-house.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>NEEDLE-<i>Point</i></title>
<p>a Sharper.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>NETTLED</title>
<p>tiezed, provoked, made
uneasy.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> NICK <i>it</i></title>
<p>to win at Dice, to hit
the Mark.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue,drink"><title>NICKUM</title>
<p>a Sharper, also a rooking
Ale house or Inn-keeper,Vintner, or
any Retailer.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>NICKUM-<i>Poop</i></title>
<p>a Fool, also a silly,
soft, uxorious Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>NICK-<i>Ninny</i></title>
<p>an emty Fellow, a
meer Gods-head.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>NIG</title>
<p>the clippings of Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>NIGGING</title>
<p>Clipping.</p></entry>
<!--* page 22 *-->
<entry c="money"><title>NIGGLER</title>
<p>a Clipper.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>NIGGLING</title>
<p>accompanying with a
Woman.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>NIGHT-<i>Magistrate</i></title>
<p>a Constable.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>NIGHT-<i>Walker</i></title>
<p>a Bellman; also a
light Woman; a Thief, a Rogue.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>NIGIT</title>
<p><i>qu.</i> an Ideot, i.e. a Fool.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>NIGMENOG</title>
<p>a very silly fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>NIKIN</title>
<p>a Natural, or very soft
Creature.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> NIM</title>
<p>to steal.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> NIM</title>
<p>or whip off or away any thing;
<eg>To Num a Togeman</eg>, to steal a
Cloack. <eg>To Nim a Cloak</eg>, to cut off the
Buttons in a Crowd, to whip it off a
Man's Shoulders.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>NIM <i>Gimmer</i></title>
<p>a Doctor, Surgeon,
Apothecary, or any one that cures a
Clap or a Pox.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>NINNY</title>
<p>a canting, whining Beggar;
also a Fool.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>NIP</title>
<p>a Cheat.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> NIP</title>
<p>to pinch or sharp any thing.
<eg>Nip a Bung</eg>, to cut a Purse.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>NIPPS</title>
<p>the Shears with which
Money was wont to be clipt.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>NIZY</title>
<p>a Fool or Coxcomb.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>NOB</title>
<p>a Head.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>NOCKY</title>
<p>a silly, dull Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>NODDLE</title>
<p>the Head.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>NODDY</title>
<p>a Fool. <eg>Knave Noddy</eg>, a
Game on the Cards.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>NOOZED</title>
<p>or <eg>caught in a Nooze</eg>,
married; also hanged.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime,punishment"><title>NOPE</title>
<p>a Blow, a Knock on the
Pate; as <eg>We hit him a Nope on the Costard</eg>.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>NOSE-<i>Gent</i></title>
<p>a Recluse or Nun.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>NUB</title>
<p>the Neck; also Coition.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>NUBBING</title>
<p>hanging. <eg>To be nubbed</eg>,
to be hanged.</p></entry>
<entry c="place,punishment"><title>NUBBING-<i>Cheat</i></title>
<p>the Gallows.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment,person"><title>NUBBING-<i>Cove</i></title>
<p>the Hangman.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>NUBBING-<i>Ken</i></title>
<p>the Sessions House.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>NUG</title>
<p>a Word of Love, as <eg>my Dear
Nug</eg>, my Dear Love.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>NUMMS</title>
<p>a sham, or Collar-shirt,
to hide the other when dirty.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>NUT-<i>crackers</i></title>
<p>a Pillory, <eg>The Cull
lookt thro' the Nut-crackers</eg>, i.e. The
Rogue stood in the Pillory.</p></entry>
</letter>
<letter name="o"><title>O</title>
<entry c="person"><title>OAK</title>
<p>a rich Man, of good Substance
and Credit.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>OGLES</title>
<p><eg><i>Eyes</i> Rum Ogles</eg>, fine, bright
clear, piercing Eyes.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>OLD-<i>Dog at it</i></title>
<p>good or expert.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>OLD-<i>Dog at Common-Prayer</i></title>
<p>a poor
Hackney Parson that can read but not
preach well.</p></entry>
<!--* col *-->
<entry c="drink"><title>OLD-<i>Harry</i></title>
<p>a Composition used by
Vintners when they bedevil their
Wines.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>OLD-<i>Mr-Gory</i></title>
<p>a Piece of Gold.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>OLD <i>Roger</i></title>
<p>the Devil.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>OLD <i>Toast</i></title>
<p>a brisk old Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>OLIVERS <i>Skull</i></title>
<p>a Chamber Pot.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>ONE <i>in Ten</i></title>
<p>a Parson.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>ONE <i>of my Cousins</i></title>
<p>a Wench.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>OS <i>Chives</i></title>
<p>Bone handled Knives.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>OUT-At-Heels</title>
<title>or <i>elbows</i></title>
<p>in a declining
Condition going down the
Wind.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>OYL <i>of Barley</i></title>
<p>strong Drink.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>OX <i>House</i></title>
<p><eg>He must go thro' the Ox-house
to Bed</eg>, said of an old Fellow that
marries a young Woman.</p></entry>
</letter>
<letter name="p"><title>P</title>
<entry c="rogue"><title>PAD</title>
<p>the Highway; also a Robber
thereon.</p></entry>
<entry c="place,punishment"><title>PADDINGTON-<i>Fair</i></title>
<p>an Execution
of Malefactors at <i>Tyburn</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="phrase" sortas="PAINTER"><title><i>Ill cut your</i> PAINTER <i>for ye</i></title>
<p>I'll
prevent your doing me any Mischief:
the Tar Cant when they quarrel onw
with another.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>PALLIARDS</title>
<p>those whose Fathers
were <i>Clapperdogeons</i>, or born Beggars,
and who themselves follow the same
Trade. The Female sort of these
Wretches frequently borrow Children
if they have none of their own, and
planting them about in Straw,
draw the greater Pity from the Spectators, screwing their Faces to the
moving Postures, and crying at Pleasure,
and making the Children also
cry by pinching them, or otherwise;
mean time her Com rogue, the Male
<i>Palliard</i>, lies bagging in the Fields,
with <i>Cleymes</i> or artificial Sores, which
he makes by <i>Spere-wort</i> or <i>Arsnick</i>,
which draws them into Blisters.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>PANAM</title>
<p>Bread.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>PANTER</title>
<p>a Heart.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>PANTLER</title>
<p>a Butler.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>PAPLER</title>
<p>Milk-Pottage.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>PARINGS</title>
<p>the Clippings of Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>PATRI-COVES</title>
<title>or <i>Pater Cove</i></title>
<p>strolling Priests that marry under a Hedge,
without Gospel or Common-prayer
Book: The couple standing on each
side a dead Beast, are bid to live together
till Death them does part; so
shaking Hands the Wedding is ended,
also any Minister, or Parson.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>PAUME</title>
<p>See <i>Palm</i> [[not present]].</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>PAW</title>
<p>a Hand.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>PAWN</title>
<p>the same as <i>Palm</i>, which
see. [[not present]]</p></entry>
<!--* page 23 *-->
<entry c="thing"><title>PEAK</title>
<p>any kind of Lace.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>PECULIAR</title>
<p>a Mistress; also particular,
private, proper.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>PED</title>
<p>a Basket.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>PEEPERS</title>
<p>a Looking-glass. <eg>Track
the Dancers and Pike with the Peepers</eg>;
Whip up the Stairs, and trip off with
the Looking-glass.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>PEEPERS</title>
<p>Eyes.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>PEERY</title>
<p>fearful, shy, fly. <eg>The Cull's
Peery</eg>; The Rogue's afraid to venture.
<eg>There's a Peery, 'tis snitch</eg>, there are a
great many People, there'sno good to
be done.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>PEETER</title>
<p>a Portmanteau, or Cloak-bag.
<eg>Bite the Peelter</eg>, to whip off the
Cloak-bag.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>PEG-<i>Trantums</i></title>
<p>as <eg>Gone to Peg-Trantums</eg>, dead.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>PELTING <i>Village</i></title>
<p>blind, obscure.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>PENNANCE <i>Board</i></title>
<p>a Pillory.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>PENTHOUSE <i>Nub</i></title>
<p>a very broad
brimmed hat.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>PEPPERED <i>off</i></title>
<p>soundly clapt or
Poxt.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>PERIWINKLE</title>
<p>a Peruke, or Perriwig.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>PETER <i>Lay</i></title>
<p>Rogues who follow
petty Thefts; such as cutting Portmanteau's, &c;
from behind Coaches,
breaking Shop Glasses, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="phrase"><title>PETER <i>Lug</i></title>
<p><eg>Who is Peter Lug?</eg> who
let's the Glass stand at his Door.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>PETTICOAT <i>Pensioner</i></title>
<p>a Gallant
maintained for secret Service.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>PHARAOH</title>
<p>very strong Malt Drink.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>PHENIX <i>Men</i></title>
<p>See <i>Firedrakes</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,drink"><title>PHILISTINES</title>
<p>Serjeants, Bailiffs and
their Crew. Also Drunkards. <eg>I fell
among the Philistines</eg>, I chopt upon a
Knot of drunken Fellows.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>PICKING</title>
<p>little Stealing, Pilfering
Petty Larceny.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>PICKAROON</title>
<p>a very shabby poor
Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>PICKLED</title>
<p>very arch or waggish. <eg>In
Pickle</eg>, Poxt. <eg>Rods in Pickle</eg>, or <eg>Revenge
in Lavender</eg>.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>PIG</title>
<p>Six-pence. <eg>The Cull tipt me a
Pig</eg>, The Man gave me Six pence.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>PIG-<i>Widgeon</i></title>
<p>a silly Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> PIKE</title>
<p>to run away, flee, quit or
leave the Place; also to die, <eg>Pike on the
Been</eg>, run away as fast as you can.
<eg>Pik'd off</eg>, run away, fled, broke; also
dead. <eg>To pass the Pikes</eg>, to be out of
Danger. <eg>There's a Cull knos us; if we
dont pike, he'll bone us</eg>, that Fellow sees
is' if we don't scour off, he'll apprehend
us. <eg>Then we'll pike, 'tis all Bowman</eg>;
we'll be gone, all is well, the
Coast is clear.</p></entry>
<!--* col *-->
<entry c="bawd"><title>PIMP-<i>Whiskin</i></title>
<p>a top Trader in
pimping.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> PINCH</title>
<p>to steal or convey slily
any Thing away. <eg>To pinch on the Parsons
side</eg>; to sharp him of his Tithes.
<eg>At a Pinch</eg>, upon a Push or Exigence.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>PINK'D</title>
<p>pricked with a Sword in a
re-encounter or Duel. <eg>He pinked his
Dubblet</eg>, he run him through.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>PIT</title>
<p>the Hole under the Gallows,
into which those that pay not the Fee,
(viz. 6<i>s</i>. 8<i>d</i>.) are cast and buried.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>PIT <i>a Pat</i></title>
<title>or <i>Pintle de Pantledy</i></title>
<p>sadly scared, greviously frighted.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>PLANT</title>
<p>to lay, place or hide.
<eg>Plant your Whids and stow them</eg>, Be
wary what you say or let slip.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>PLAISTER <i>of hot Guts</i></title>
<p>one warm
Belly clapt to another.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>PLATE <i>Fleet coes in</i></title>
<p>when the
Money comes to Hand.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>PALTTER-<i>Faces</i> Jade</title>
<p>a very broad
ordinary faced Woman.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>PLAY <i>it off</i></title>
<p>to play Booty; also to
throw away, at Gaming, so much and
no more. <eg>He plays it off</eg>, he cheats.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>PLUCK <i>the Ribbon</i></title>
<p>Ring the Bell at
the Tavern.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>PLUMP <i>in the Pocket</i></title>
<p>flush of Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>PLYER</title>
<p>a Crutch; also a Trader.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>POKER</title>
<p>a Sword.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>POLT <i>on the Pate</i></title>
<p>a good Rap there.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>POPS</title>
<p>Pistols, <eg>To pop</eg>, to fire a Pistol,
&c;</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>PORKER</title>
<p>a Sword.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>POST</title>
<p>as <eg>From Pillar to Post</eg>, from
Constable to Constable.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>POT-<i>Valiant</i></title>
<p>Drunk.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>POULAIN</title>
<p>a Bubo.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>POWDERING-<i>Tub</i></title>
<p>the pocky Hospital
at <i>Kingsland</i> near <i>London</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>POISONED</title>
<p>big with Child.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>POISON <i>Pate</i></title>
<p>red Haired.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>PRANCER</title>
<p>a Horse.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>PRANCER's <i>Nab</i></title>
<p>a Horse's Head,
used in a sham Seal to such a Pass.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>PRATTS</title>
<p>the Thighs or Buttocks;
also a Tinder-box or Touch-box.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>PRATING-<i>Cheat</i></title>
<p>a Tongue.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>PRATE-<i>Roast</i></title>
<p>a Talking Boy.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title link="ignore">PREY</title>
<p>Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>PRICKEAR'D <i>Fellow</i></title>
<p>a Crop whose
Ears are longer than his Hair.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>PRICK <i>Louse</i></title>
<p>a Taylor.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>PRIEST <i>Linked</i></title>
<p>married.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue,person"><title>PRIG</title>
<p>a Thief, a Cheat: also a nice,
beauish, silly Fellow, is called a <eg>meer
Prig</eg>.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>PRIGGERS</title>
<p>Thieves.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>PRIGGING</title>
<p>lying with a Woman.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>PRIGSTAR</title>
<p>a Rival in Love.</p></entry>
<!--* page 24 *-->
<entry c="adj"><title>PRIGGISH</title>
<p>Thievish.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>PRIG <i>Napper</i></title>
<p>a Horse-stealer; also a Thief Taker.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>PRIGGERS <i>of the Cacklers</i></title>
<p>Poultry-stealers.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>PRIGGERS <i>of Prancers</i></title>
<p>Horse-stealers, who carry a Bridle in their Pockets,
and a small pad Saddle in their
Breeches.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>PRINCE <i>Prig</i></title>
<p>a King of the Gypsies;
also Top-Thief, or Receiver General.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>PRINCOCK</title>
<p>a pert, forward Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>PRINKING</title>
<p>nicely dressing. <eg>Prinked
up</eg>, set up on the Cupboards head, in
their best Clothes, or in State. Stiff-starched.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title><i>Mistress</i> PRINCUM-<i>Prancium</i></title>
<p>such a stiff, overnice precise Madam.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>PROG</title>
<p>Meat. <eg>Rum Prog.</eg>, nice eating.
<eg>The Cull tipt us rum Prog</eg>; the
Gentleman, so serve a Turn; a Cat's Foot.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title><i>To</i> PUMMEL</title>
<p>to beat, <eg>I pummelled
his Sides for him.</eg>, I beat him soundly.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> PUMP</title>
<p>to wheedle-Secrets out
of any one.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>PUNCH-<i>Houses</i></title>
<p>bawdy-houses.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>PUNK</title>
<p>a little Whore.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>PUPIL <i>Mongers</i></title>
<p>Tutors at the Universities.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>PURE</title>
<p>a Mistress.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd,person"><title>PUREST-<i>Pure</i></title>
<p>a Top-Mistress or
fine Woman.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>PURL-<i>Royal</i></title>
<p>Canary with a Dash of
Wormwood.</p></entry>
<entry c="place,bawd"><title>PUSHING-<i>School</i></title>
<p>a Fencing-School;
also a Bawdy house.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title link="ignore">PUT</title>
<p><eg>A Country Put</eg>, a silly, shallow
pated, Fellow. <eg>Put so it</eg>, beset.</p></entry>
</letter>
<letter name="q"><title>Q</title>
<entry c="thing"><title>QUACKING-<i>Cheat</i></title>
<p>a Duck.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>QUAIL Pipe</title>
<p>a Woman's Tongue.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>QUAKING <i>Cheat</i></title>
<p>a Calf or Sheep.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>QUARREL <i>Picker</i></title>
<p>a Glazier.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>QUARRON</title>
<p>a Body.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>QUEAN</title>
<p>a Whore or Slut. <eg>A dirty
Quean</eg>, a Puzzle or Slut.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>QUEERE</title>
<title>or <i>Quire</i></title>
<p>base, roguish,
naught. <eg>How queerely the Cull Trouts?</eg>
How roguishly the Fellow loocks.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>QUEERE-Birds</title>
<p>such as having got
loose, return to their old Trade of
roguing and thieving.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue,drink"><title>QUEERE <i>Bluffer</i></title>
<p>a sneaking sharping,
Cut-throat Ale-house Man or Inn-keeper.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>QUEERE-<i>Bung</i></title>
<p>an empty Purse.</p></entry>
<!--* col *-->
<entry c="thing"><title>QUEERE-<i>Clout</i></title>
<p>a sorry old Handkerchief,
not worth nimming.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj,money"><title>QUEERE-<i>Cole</i></title>
<p>clipt, counterfeit
Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>QUEERE <i>Cole-maker</i></title>
<p>a false Coiner.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue,money"><title>QUEERE <i>Cole-fencer</i></title>
<p>a Receiver and
Putter off of false Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>QUEERE-<i>Cove</i></title>
<p>a Rogue.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>QUEERE-<i>Cussin</i></title>
<p>a Justice of Peace;
also a churl.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>QUEERE-<i>Cull</i></title>
<p>a Fop or Fool, a
Cods-head; also a shabby poor Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>QUEERE <i>Degen</i></title>
<p>an Iron, Steel or
Brass hilted Sword.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>QUEERE-<i>Diver</i></title>
<p>a bungling Pick-pocket.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>QUEERE-<i>Doxy</i></title>
<p>a jilting Jade, a sorry
shabby Wench.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>QUEERE-<i>Drawers</i></title>
<p>Yarn, or coarse
Worsted, ordinary or old Stockings.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>QUEERE-<i>Duke</i></title>
<p>a poor decayed
Gentleman, also a lean, thin, half-starved Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>QUEERE-<i>Fun</i></title>
<p>a bungling Cheat or
Trick; also Game or Merriment.</p></entry>
<entry c="place,punishment"><title>QUEERE-<i>Ken</i></title>
<p>an ill House, a Prison
or a place of Correction.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>QUEERE-<i>Kicks</i></title>
<p>course ordinary or
old tattered Breeches.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>QUEERE-<i>Mort</i></title>
<p>a dirty Drab, a jilting
Wench, a pocky Jade.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>QUEERE <i>Nab</i></title>
<p>a Felt, <i>Carolina</i> Cloth
or ordinary Hat.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>QUEERE-<i>Peepers</i></title>
<p>old-fashioned,
ordinary or common Looking glasses.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing,rogue"><title>QUEERE-<i>Prancer</i></title>
<p>a foundered Jade,
an ordinary low prized Horse: also a
cowardly or faint hearted Horse-stealer.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>QUEERE-<i>Topping</i></title>
<p>sorry Head-dresses.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> QUIBBLE</title>
<p>to trifle or pun.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title><i>Sir</i> QUIBBLE-<i>Queere</i></title>
<p>a trifling, silly
shatter-brained Fellow; a meer Wittol
or Punter, likewise a Whiffler.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>QUIDDS</title>
<p>Cash, or ready Money.
<eg>Can you tip me any Quidds</eg>? Can you
lend me any Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>QUOD</title>
<p><i>Newgate</i>; also a Prison, tho'
generally for Debt. <eg>The Poor Dabs in
the Quod.</eg> the poor Rogue is in <i>Limbo</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>QUOTA</title>
<p>Snack, Share, Part, Proportion or Dividend.</p></entry>
</letter>
<letter name="r"><title>R</title>
<entry c="person"><title>RABBET-<i>Suckers</i></title>
<p>young Unthrifts
taking Goods on Tick of Pawnbrokers
or Tallymen, at excessive
Rates.</p></entry>
<!--* page 25 *-->
<entry c="drink"><title>RABBITS</title>
<p>wooden Cans to drink
out of, once used on the Roads, now
almost laid by.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>RAG</title>
<p>a Farthing. <eg>Not a Rag left</eg>; I
have lost or spent all my Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>RAGAMUFFIN</title>
<p>a Taterdemallion.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>RAG-<i>Water</i></title>
<p>a common sort of strong
Water.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>RAKE</title>
<title><i>Rake-hell</i></title>
<title><i>Rake shame</i></title>
<p>a lewd Spark or Debauchee.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>RALPH <i>Spooner</i></title>
<p>a Fool.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>RANGING</title>
<p>intriguing, and enjoying
many Women.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>RANK <i>Rider</i></title>
<p>a Highwayman; also
a Jockey.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>RANTIPOLE</title>
<p>a rude wild Boy or
Girl.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>RAP</title>
<p>to swop or exchange a Horse
or Goods; also a Polt on the Pate.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RAPPER</title>
<p>a swinging great Lye.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>RAREE-SHOW-<i>Men</i></title>
<p>poor <i>Savoyards</i>
strolling up and down with portable
Boxes of Puppet-shows at their
Backs; Pedlars of Puppets.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,drink"><title>RAT</title>
<p>a drunken Man or Woman
taken up by the Watch, and carried
by the Constable to the Compter. <eg>To
smell a Rat</eg>, To suspect a Trick.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RATTLER</title>
<p>a Coach.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>RATTLING <i>Cove</i></title>
<p>a Coach-man.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>RATTLING-<i>Mumpers</i></title>
<p>such as run
after, or ply Coaches &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> RATTLE</title>
<p>to move off, or be
gone. <eg>We'll take Rattle</eg>, We must not
tarry, but whip away.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>READY <i>Rhino</i></title>
<p>Money in Possession.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>RECRUITS</title>
<p>Money (expected.) <eg>Have
yuo rais'd the Recruits?</eg> Is the Money
come in?</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>RED-<i>Fustian</i></title>
<p>Claret, or red Port-Wine.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>RED-<i>Letter-Man</i></title>
<p>a Roman Catholick.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RED-<i>Rag</i></title>
<p>a Tongue.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>REMEMBER <i>Parson Malham</i></title>
<p>q. d.
Pray Sir drink about. A <i>Norfolk</i>
Phrase.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>RHINO</title>
<p>ready Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>RIBBIN</title>
<p>Money. <eg>The Ribbin Runs
shick</eg>; his Breeches are well lined
with Money. <eg>The Ribbin runs thin</eg>,
He has but little Cash about him.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RICH-<i>Face</i></title>
<p>a red-Face.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>RIDG-<i>Cully</i></title>
<p>a Gold-smith.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>RIFF-<i>Raff</i></title>
<p>the Rabble or Scum of
the People, Tagrag and Longtail.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RIG</title>
<p>Game, Diversion, Ridicule.
See <i>Fun</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RIGGING</title>
<p>Cloaths. <eg>I'll unrig the
Bloss</eg>; I will strip the Wench.</p></entry>
<!--* col *-->
<entry c="thing"><title><i>Rum</i> RIGGING</title>
<p>fine Cloaths. <eg>The
Cull has Rum Rigging, let's ding him,
mill him, and pike</eg>; The Man has very
good Cloaths, let us knock him down,
kill him, and scour off.
</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>RING</title>
<p>Money extorted by Rogues
on the Highway, or by Gentlemen
Beggars.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>ROAST-<i>Meat-Cloaths</i></title>
<p>Holiday-Cloaths. <eg>To rule the Roast</eg>, To be master
or Paramount. <eg>Roasted</eg>, Arrested:
<eg>I'll Roast the Dab</eg>, I will arrest the
Rascal: To <eg>Roast</eg>, signifies also to rally;
to teize, to hunt, or banter.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>ROBERDS-<i>Men</i></title>
<p>mighty Thieves,
like <i>Robin Hood</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>ROCHESTER-<i>Portion</i></title>
<p>two torn
Smocks, and what Nature gave.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing,person"><title>ROGER</title>
<p>a Portmanteau, a Goose;
also a Man's Yard. Likewise a Thief-taker.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>ROGUE</title>
<p>a name which includes all
the other Denominations.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>ROMBOYL&stress;D</title>
<p>sought after with a Warrant.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>ROMBOYLES</title>
<p>Watch and Ward.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>ROMER</title>
<p>a drinking Glass; also
wider.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>ROOK</title>
<p>a Cheat a Knave. <eg>To Rook</eg>,
To cheat or play the Knave.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>ROSY-<i>Gills</i></title>
<p>sanguine or fresh colour'd</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>ROTAN</title>
<p>a Coach, or Waggon, any
thing that runs upon Wheels; but
prinicipally a Cart.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>ROT-<i>Gut</i></title>
<p>very small or thin Beer.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>ROVERS</title>
<p>Pyrates, Wanderers, Vagabonds.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>ROUGH</title>
<p>as, <eg>To lie Rough</eg>, to lie in
one's Cloaths all Night.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>ROYSTERS</title>
<p>rude roaring Rogues.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> RUB</title>
<p>to run away. <eg>A Rub</eg>, an
Impediment, Obstacle, Hinderance,
Stop, Hardship, or Difficulty. <eg>Rub on</eg>,
to live indifferently. <eg>Rub through the World</eg>,
to live tolerably well in it.</p></entry>
<entry c="phrase,punishment"><title><i>He</i> RUBS <i>us to the Whit</i></title>
<p>He sends us
to <i>Newgate</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>RUFF</title>
<p>an old-fashioned double
Band; from whence the Pillory is called, <eg>The Wooden Ruff</eg>.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RUFFIN</title>
<p>the Devil; as <eg>The Ruffin
nab the Cuffin Quire, and let the Harman
beck trine with his Kinchins about
his Col quarron</eg>; i.e. Let the Devil take
the Justice, and let the Constable hang
with his Children about his Neck.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>RUFFLERS</title>
<p>notorious Rogues,
who, under Pretence of being maimed
Soldiers or Seamen, implore the Charity
of well disposed Persons, and fail
not to watch Opportunities either to
<!--* page 26 *-->
steal, break open Houses, or even
commit Murder.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RUFFMANS</title>
<p>the Woods or Bushes.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RUFF-<i>Peck</i></title>
<p>Bacon.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RUG</title>
<p><eg>It's all a Rug</eg>, The Game is
secured.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>RUM</title>
<p>gallant, fine, rich, best or
excellent.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>RUM-<i>Beck</i></title>
<p>any Justice of the Peace.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>RUM-<i>Bite</i></title>
<p>a clever Cheat, a neat
Trick.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RUM-<i>Bleating-Cheat</i></title>
<p>a very fat
Weather. [[See Bleating-Cheat]]</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>RUM-<i>Blower</i></title>
<p>a veru handsom Mistress,
kept by a particular Man.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,drink"><title>RUM-<i>Bluffer</i></title>
<p>a jolly Host, Inn-keeper,
or Victualler.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>RUMBO</title>
<p>a Prison or Goal.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>RUM-<i>Bob</i></title>
<p>a young Apprentice;
also a sharp, sly Trick. Likewise a
pretty short Wig.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RUM <i>Boile</i></title>
<p>a Ward or Watch.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>RUM-<i>Booze</i></title>
<p>Wine; also very good
or string Drink.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RUM-<i>Boozing-Welts</i></title>
<p>Bunches of Grapes.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>RUM-<i>Bubber</i></title>
<p>a dexterous Fellow at
stealing Silver Tankards from Publick
Houses.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RUM-<i>Bughar</i></title>
<p>a very pretty and
valuable Dog.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>RUM-<i>Bung</i></title>
<p>a full Purse.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>RUMLY</title>
<p>bravely, cleverly, delicately, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>RUM-<i>Chub</i></title>
<p>which is, (among the
Butchers) an ignorant Market-man or
Woman, that is <i>bit</i> by them.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RUM-<i>Clank</i></title>
<p>a large Silver Tankard.
<eg>Tip me a Rum-Clank of Bowse</eg>; i.e. Give
me a Double-tankard of Drink.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RUM-<i>Clout</i></title>
<p>a Silk, fine Cambrick,
or Holland Handkerchief.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>RUM-<i>Cod</i></title>
<p>a good Purse of Gold, or
round Sum of Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>RUM-<i>Cole</i></title>
<p>new Money, or Medals
curiously coin'd.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>RUM-<i>Cove</i></title>
<p>a great Rogue.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>RUM-<i>Cull</i></title>
<p>a rich Fool, that can be
easily <i>bit</i>, or cheated by any body;
also one that is very generous and kind
to a Mistress.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RUM <i>Degen</i></title>
<p>a Silver-hilted or inlaid Sword.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>RUM-<i>Dell</i></title>
<p>the same as, <i>Rum-Doxy</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>RUM-<i>Diver</i></title>
<p>a compleat or clever
Pick-pocket, The same with <i>Files</i> or
<i>Bung-nippers</i>. Which see.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>RUM-<i>Doxy</i></title>
<p>a beautiful Woman,
or light Lady.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RUM-<i>Drawers</i></title>
<p>Silk Stokings, or
very fine worsted Hose.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,drink"><title>RUM-<i>Dropper</i></title>
<p>a Vintner.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>RUM-<i>Dabber</i></title>
<p>an experienc'd or
<!--* col *-->
expert Picker of Locks. The same
with GILT, which see.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>RUM-<i>Duke</i></title>
<p>a jolly handsome Man,
<eg>Rum-Dukes</eg>, the boldest or stoutest Fellows
(lately) amongst the <i>Alsatians,
Minters, Sawyards, &c;</i> sent for to
remove and guard the Goods of such
Bankrupts as intended to take Sanctuary
in those Places.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>RUM-<i>Dutchess</i></title>
<p>a jolly handsome Woman.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>RUM-<i>File</i></title>
<p>the same as <i>Rum-diver</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RUMFORD-<i>Lyon</i></title>
<p>a Calf.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RUM-<i>Fun</i></title>
<p>a clever Cheat or sharp
trick.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>RUM-<i>Gelt</i></title>
<p>the same as <i>Rum-Cole</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>RUM-<i>Glimmer</i></title>
<p>the King or Chief
of the Linkboys.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>RUM-<i>Gutlers</i></title>
<p>Canary-Wine; also
fine Eating.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>RUM-<i>Hopper</i></title>
<p>a Drawer. <eg>Rum-hopper,
tip us presently a Boozing-cheat of
Rum gutlers</eg>; Drawer, fill us presently
a Bottle of the best Canary.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>RUM-<i>Kicks</i></title>
<p>Silver or Gold Brokade
Breeches, or very rich with Gold or
Silver Galloon.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>RUM-<i>Mawnd</i></title>
<p>one that counterfeits
himself a Fool.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>RUM-<i>Mort</i></title>
<p>a Queen, or great Lady.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RUM-<i>Nab</i></title>
<p>a Beaver, or very good Hat.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>RUM-<i>Nantz</i></title>
<p>true <i>French</i> Brandy.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>RUM-<i>Ned</i></title>
<p>a very silly Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RUM-<i>Pad</i></title>
<p>the Highway.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>RUM-<i>Padders</i></title>
<p>the better Sort of
Highwaymen, well mounted and armed.
See <i>High Pad</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RUM-<i>Peepers</i></title>
<p>a Silver Looking-glass.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>RUMP <i>and Kidney Men</i></title>
<p>Fidlers that
play at Feasts, Fairs, Weddings &c;
and live chiefly on the Remnants of
Victuals.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RUM-<i>Prancer</i></title>
<p>a very beautiful Horse.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RUM-<i>Quidds</i></title>
<p>a great Booty, or
large Snack.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>RUM-<i>Ruff-Peck</i></title>
<p>Westphalia-Ham.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>RUM-<i>Squeeze</i></title>
<p>much Wine or good
Liquor given among the Fidlers.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RUM-<i>Snitch</i></title>
<p>a good Fillip on the
Nose.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RUM-<i>Tol</i></title>
<p>the same as <i>Rum-degen</i>,
being the newest Cant Word of the two.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RUM-<i>Tilter</i></title>
<p>the same as <i>Rum-tol</i>,
or <i>Rum-degen</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>RUM-<i>Topping</i></title>
<p>a rich Head-dress.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>RUM-<i>Ville</i></title>
<p><i>London</i></p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>Wiper</title>
<p>the same as <i>Rum-Clout</i></p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> RUN-<i>Riot</i></title>
<p>to turn Spark, and
run out of all.</p></entry>
<!--* page 27 *-->
<entry c="person"><title>RUNNING <i>Stationers</i></title>
<p>Hawkers, or
those that cry News and Books about
the Streets.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>RUNNER</title>
<p>the same as <i>Budge</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>RUSTYGUTS</title>
<p>an old blunt Fellow.</p></entry>
</letter>
<letter name="s"><title>S</title>
<entry c="thing"><title>SACK</title>
<p>a Pocket. <eg>To Dive into his
Sack</eg>; To pick his Pocket.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>SACK</title>
<p>also signifies to be drunk;
As, <eg>He bought the Sack</eg>; i.e. He got
drunk.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SALESMAN'S <i>Dog</i></title>
<p>the same as <i>Barker</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SALAMON</title>
<p>the Beggar's Sacrament
or Oath.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>SCAB</title>
<p>a sorry Wench, or scoundrel Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SCANDALOUS</title>
<p>a sorry Perriwig.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>SCANDAL-<i>Proof</i></title>
<p>a thorough-pac'd
<i>Alsatian</i>, or <i>Minter</i>; one harden'd, or
past Shame.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SCEW</title>
<p>See <i>Skew</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>SCHOOL <i>of Venus</i></title>
<p>a Bawdy-house.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>SCONCE</title>
<p><eg>To build a large sconce</eg>;
To run deep upon Tick or Trust.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SCOTCH <i>Fiddle</i></title>
<p>the Itch.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SCOTCH-<i>Mist</i></title>
<p>a sober, soaking
Rain.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>SCOUNDREL</title>
<p>a Hedge bird or sorry
Scab.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> SCOURE</title>
<p>to wear. <eg>To Scoure the
Cramp-rings</eg>; To wear Bolts. Also
to run away. See <i>Scowre</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> SCOWRE</title>
<p>to run away or scamper.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue,drink"><title>SCOWRERS</title>
<p>Drunkards beating
the Watch, breaking Windows, clearing
the Streets, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="drink,money"><title>SCRAN</title>
<p>a Reckoning at a Boozing-ken, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SCRAP</title>
<p>s Design, a purpos'd Villainy, a vile Intention; also a perpetrated
Roguery: <eg>He whiddles the whole
Scrap</eg>: He discovers all he knows.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SCRIP</title>
<p>a Shred or Scrap of Paper.
As, <eg>The Cully did freely blot the Scrip,
and tipt me 40 Hogs</eg>; One enter'd into
Bond with me for 40 Shillings.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>SCRUB</title>
<p>a Ragamuffin.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SCRUBADO</title>
<p>the Itch.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title><i>To</i> SCREW</title>
<p>to copulate with a
Woman.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title><i>A</i> SCREW</title>
<p>a Strumper, a common
Prostitute.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>SCUM</title>
<p>the Riff-raff, or Tagrag and
Longtail.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>SEALER</title>
<p>one that gives Bonds and
Judgement for Goods and Money.</p></entry>
<!--* col *-->
<entry c="thing"><title>SECRET</title>
<p>as, <eg>Let into the Secret</eg>;
When one is drawn in at Horse-racing,
Cock-fighting, Bowling, and other
such Sports or Games, and <i>bit</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj,money"><title>SEEDY</title>
<p>poor, Money-less, exhausted.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>SERAGLIO</title>
<p>a Bawdy-house; so
called from the Great Turk's Palace.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>SERAGLIETTO</title>
<p>a lousy, vile,
sorry Bawdy-house, a meer Dog-hole.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title link="ignore">SET</title>
<p>as <eg>Dead Set</eg>, a Term used by
Thief-catchers when they have a Certainty
of seizing zome of their Clients,
in order to bring them to Justice.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SETTERS</title>
<title>or <i>Setting-dogs</i></title>
<p>they
that draw in <i>Bubbles</i>, for old Gamesters
to rook; also a Serjeant's Yeoman,
or Bailiff's Follower, or Second.
Also an Excise Officer.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> SETTLE</title>
<p>to stun, or knock
down; as, <eg>We settled the Cull by a
Stoter on his Nob</eg>; i.e. We took him
such a Blow on the Head, as quite stunn'd him.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>SHABBY</title>
<p>in poor sorry Rigging.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>SHABBEROON</title>
<p>a Ragamuffin.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>SHAB'D-<i>Off</i></title>
<p>sneak'd, or fled away.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SHAG-<i>Bag</i></title>
<p>a poor shabby Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SHAM</title>
<p>a Cheat, or Trick. <eg>To Cut a
Sham</eg>; To play a Rogue's Trick.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SHAMBLE-<i>Legg'd</i></title>
<p>one that goes
wide, and shuffles his Feet about.
<eg>Shake your Shambles</eg>; Haste, be gone.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SHAPPEAU</title>
<title>or <i>Shappo</i></title>
<p>for <i>Chappeau</i>, F. a Hat.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>SHARPER</title>
<p>a Cheat, one that lives by his Wits.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SHARPERS-<i>Tools</i></title>
<p>false Dice.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>SHAVER</title>
<p><eg>A cunning Shaver</eg>; A
subtle, smart Fellow. <eg>He shaves close</eg>;
He gripes, squeezes, or extorts very
severely.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>SHAVINGS</title>
<p>the Chippings of Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,bawd,rogue"><title>SHE-<i>Napper</i></title>
<p>a Woman Thief-catcher; also
a Hen-bawd, or Procuress;
a Debaucher of young Virgins; a
Maiden head-jobber.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title link="ignore">SHOP</title>
<p>a Prison.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>SHOP-<i>Lift</i></title>
<p>one that Steals under
pretence of cheap'ning.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>SHOPT</title>
<p>imprison'd.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>SHOT</title>
<p>as, <eg>To pay one's Shot</eg>; To
pay one's Club or Proportion.</p></entry>
<entry c="phrase"><title>SHOT <i>'twixt Wind and Water</i></title>
<p>Clapt or Pox'd.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SHOULDER-<i>Clapper</i></title>
<p>a Serjeant or Bailiff.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>SHOULDER-<i>Sham</i></title>
<p>a Partner to a <i>File</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SHRED</title>
<p>a Taylor.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SHUFFLER</title>
<title>or <i>Shuffling-Fellow</i></title>
<p>a slippery, shifting Fellow.</p></entry>
<!--* page 28 *-->
<entry c="rogue"><title>SHURK</title>
<p>a Shark or Sharper.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>SICE</title>
<p>Six-pence.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> SILENT <i>a Man</i></title>
<p>to knock him
down, so as to stun him: To lay him
down for dead. <eg>See the Cull is Silent</eg>,
is also us'd by desperate Villains, for
cutting the Throat, or shooting the
unhappy Person who falls in their way.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>SILK <i>Snatchers</i></title>
<p>a Set of Varlets,
who snatch Hoods, Scarves, Handkerchiefs,
or any Thing they can come at.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SIMKIN</title>
<p>a Fool.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>SIMON</title>
<p>Six-pence.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SINGLE-<i>Ten</i></title>
<p>a very foolish, silly Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SIR JOHN</title>
<p>the Country-Vicar or Parson.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SIR TIMOTHY</title>
<p>one that treats
every Body, and pays the Reckonings
every where.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SKEW</title>
<p>a Beggar's wooden Dish.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SKIN-<i>Flint</i></title>
<p>a griping, sharping,
close-fisted Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,drink"><title>SKINKER</title>
<p>that fills the Glass or Cup.
<eg>Who Skinks?</eg> Who pours out the Liquor.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>SKIP-<i>Jacks</i></title>
<p>Yougsters that ride
Horses for Sale.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>SKIPPER</title>
<p>a Barn.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SKRIP</title>
<p>Paper.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SLAM</title>
<p>a Trick; also also a Game intirely
lost, without getting one on that
Side.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SLAT</title>
<p>a Sheet.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>SLATE</title>
<p>a half Crown; also the
same as <eg>Slot</eg>.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>SLEEPING-<i>House</i></title>
<p>without Shop,
Warehouse or Cellar, only for a private Family.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SLOUCH</title>
<p>See <i>Zlouch</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>SLUBBER-<i>Degullion</i></title>
<p>a slovenly,
dirty, nasty Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>SLUR</title>
<p>a Cheat at Dice; also a slight
Scandal or Affront.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>SLY-<i>Boots</i></title>
<p>a seeming silly, but subtle Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SMACKING-<i>Cove</i></title>
<p>a Coachman.</p></entry>
<entry c="v,crime"><title><i>To</i> SMASH</title>
<p>to quell, to beat or
abuse violently; to kill.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>SMASH</title>
<p>to smite, to kick down
Stairs. <eg>The Chubs tout the Blosses, they
smash them, and make them brush</eg>; The
Sharpers catch their Mistress at the
Tavern, making merry without them,
kick them down Stairs, and force
them to rub off.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SMEAR</title>
<p>a Painter, or Plaisterer,
&c;</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SMELLER</title>
<p>a Nose.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SMELLING-<i>Cheat</i></title>
<p>a Nose-gay; also
an Orchard or Garden.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>SMELTS</title>
<p>Half-Guineas.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SMITER</title>
<p>an Arm.</p></entry>
<!--* col *-->
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> SMOKE</title>
<p>to suspect or smell a Design.
<eg>It is smok'd</eg> It is made Publick, all
have Notice.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SMOKER</title>
<p>a Tobacconist.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>SMOKY</title>
<p>Jealous, as, <eg>He is a smoky
Cull</eg>; He is a suspicious Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SMUG</title>
<p>a Blacksmith.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>SMUGGLING-KEN</title>
<p>a Bawdy-house.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>SMUTTY</title>
<p>Bawdy.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>SNACK</title>
<p>Share or Part. <eg>To go snacks</eg>.
To go halves, or Share and Share alike.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> SNABBLE</title>
<p>to rifle, to strip, or
plunder. <eg>To Snabble a Poll</eg>, to run
away with a Peruke or Head-dress.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> SNAFFLE</title>
<p>to steal, to rob, to
purloin. <eg>A snaffler of Prancers</eg>; a
Horse-Stealer. <eg>Snuffle</eg>, is also a Highwayman
that has got a Booty.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>SNAPT</title>
<p>taken, caught.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>SNEAK</title>
<p><eg>He goes upon the Sneak at
Darkmans</eg>, He privately gets into Houses
or Shops at Night and Steals undiscovered.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title><i>A</i> SNEAKING <i>Budge</i></title>
<p>one that robs
alone, and deals chiefly in petty Larcenies.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> SNIC</title>
<p>to cut.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> SNILCH</title>
<p>to eye or see any Body.
<eg>The Cull snilches</eg>; the Man eyes or sees
you.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>SNIP</title>
<p>a Cheat; <eg>T snip</eg>, to cheat.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SNITCH</title>
<title>or <i>Snitchel</i></title>
<p>a Filip on the
Nose.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>SNITE</title>
<p>to wipe, or flap. <eg>Snite his
Snitch</eg>; wipe his Nose, or give him a
good Flap on the Face.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SNOUT</title>
<p>a Hogshead.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>SNOW-<i>Broth</i></title>
<p>Snow-water.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>SNUDGE</title>
<p>one that lurks under a
Bed, to watch an Opportunity to rob
the House.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>SNUG</title>
<p><eg>All's snug</eg>; All's quiet, used
by Villains, when every thing is silent
and they hear no body stir to oppose
their intended Rogueries.</p></entry>
<entry c="money,punishment"><title>SOCK</title>
<p>a Pocket. <eg>Not a Rag in my
Sock</eg>; I han't a Farthing in my Pocket.
Also beat; <eg>I'll Sock ye</eg>; I'll drub
ye tightly.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>SOCKET <i>Money</i></title>
<p>demanded and
spent upon <i>Marriage</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>SOLDIERS-<i>Bottle</i></title>
<p>a large one.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SOLOMON</title>
<title>or <i>Soloman</i></title>
<p>the Mass.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SON <i>of Apollo</i></title>
<p>a Scholar.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SON <i>of Mars</i></title>
<p>a Soldier.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SON <i>of Venus</i></title>
<p>a Lover of Women.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SON <i>of Mercury</i></title>
<p>a Wit. Also a
Thief.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SON <i>of Prattlement</i></title>
<p>a Lawyer.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SOUL-<i>Driver</i></title>
<p>a Parson.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,drink"><title><i>A</i> SOUL</title>
<p>one that loves Brandy.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>SOULDIER's <i>Mawnd</i></title>
<p>a counterfeit
Sore or Wound in the left Arm.</p></entry>
<!--* page 29 *-->
<entry c="money"><title>SOUSE</title>
<p><eg>Not a Souse</eg>; not a Penny.
From <i>Sous</i>, <i>French</i> Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="v,crime"><title><i>To</i> SOUDSE</title>
<p>to fall upon, to beat
cruelly; also to plunder or kill.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>SOUTH-SEA</title>
<p>a strong distill'd Liquor,
so called by the Inhabitants and
Clients of <i>Newgate</i>, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>SOUTH-SEA <i>Mountain</i></title>
<p>Geneva.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SOW's <i>Baby</i></title>
<p>a Pig.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SOWSE <i>Crown</i></title>
<p>a Fool.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SOW-<i>Child</i></title>
<p>a Female Child.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title><i>To</i> SOWR</title>
<p>to beat violently, &c;
As, <eg>Sowr the Cull</eg>; <i>i. e.</i> knock him
down: Beat him without Mercy, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>SPANGLES</title>
<p>Ends of Gold or Silver.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SPANISH-<i>Gout</i></title>
<p>the Pox.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SPANISH-<i>Money</i></title>
<p>fair Words and
Compliments.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>SPANKS</title>
<p>Money, Gold or Silver.</p></entry>
<entry c="v,crime"><title><i>To</i> SPEAK <i>with</i></title>
<p>to steal.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SPECKT-<i>Wiper</i></title>
<p>a coloured Handkerchief.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> SPIRIT-<i>Away</i></title>
<p>the same as<i>Kidnap</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SPIRITUAL-<i>Flesh Broker</i></title>
<p>a Parson.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SPLIT-<i>Fig</i></title>
<p>a Grocer.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SPLITTER-<i>of-Causes</i></title>
<p>a Lawyer.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> SPRING <i>a Partridge</i></title>
<p>to draw a
Person in to be bit. <eg>To spring Partridges</eg>;
to raise a Crowd in order to
rob or pick Pockets.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title><i>To</i> SPUNGE</title>
<p>to drink at others Cost.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>SPUNGING-<i>House</i></title>
<p>a By-prison.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title><i>A</i> SPUNGING <i>Fellow</i></title>
<p>one tat lives
upon the rest, and pays nothing.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SQUAB</title>
<p>a very fat, truss Person; a
new-hatch'd Chick; also a Couch.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SQUAWL</title>
<p>a Voice; as, <eg>The Cove has
a bien Squawl</eg>; The Fellow has a good
Voice.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> SQUEEK</title>
<p>to discover, or impeach;
also to cry out. <eg>They squeek
Beef upon us</eg>; They cry out Highway-men
or Thieves after us. <eg>The Cull
squeeks</eg>; The Rogue peaches.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SQUEEKER</title>
<p>a Barboy; also a Bastard,
or any other Child. <eg>Stifle the
Squueker</eg>; Murder the Child, and
throw it into a House of Office.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SQUEEZING <i>of Wax</i></title>
<p>being bound
for any Body; also sealing of Writings.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SQUINTE-<i>Fuego</i></title>
<p>one that squints
very much.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SQUIRE <i>of Alsatia</i></title>
<p>a Man of Fortune,
drawn in, cheated, and ruin'd by
a Pack of poor, lowsy, spunging Fellows,
that lived (formerly) in <i>White-Fryars</i>.
<eg>The Squire</eg>, a Sir <i>Timothy
Treat-all</i>; also a Sap-Pate. <eg>A fat
Squire</eg>; A rich Fool.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>SQUIRISH</title>
<p>foolish; also one that
<!--* col *-->
pretends to pay all Reckonings, and is
not strong enough in the Pocket.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>STAG</title>
<p>a Term (inverting Qualities)
used for an Enemy, a Pursuer;
as, <eg>I spy a Stag</eg>, used by that notorious
young Robber <i>Shepherd</i>, lately executed,
when he first saw the Turnkey
of <i>Newgate</i>, who pursu'd and took
him after his first Escape from the <i>Condemn'd Hold</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>STALE <i>Jest</i></title>
<p>old, dull.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>STALE <i>Maid</i></title>
<p>at her last Prayers.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>STALLION</title>
<p>a Whore-Master; so
called from a Stone-horse kept to cover
Mares.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>STALL-<i>Whimper</i></title>
<p>a Bastard.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>STALLING</title>
<p>making or ordaining.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>STALLNG-<i>Ken</i></title>
<p>a Broker's Shop,
or any House that receives stollen
Goods.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> STAM-<i>Flesh</i></title>
<p>to Cant; as, <eg>The
Cully Stamfleshes rumly</eg>; He cants very
well.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>STAMMEL</title>
<title>or <i>Strammel</i></title>
<p>a brawny,
lusty, strapping Wench.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>STAMPS</title>
<p>Legs.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>STAMPERS</title>
<p>Shoes; also Carriers.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>STARTER</title>
<p>a Question; also a Flincher.
<eg>I am no Starter</eg>; I shan't flinch,
or cry to go home.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>STICK <i>Flams</i></title>
<p>a Pair of Gloves.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>STINGO</title>
<p>humming, strong Liquor.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>STITCH-<i>Back</i></title>
<p>very strong Ale.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>STOCK-<i>Drawers</i></title>
<p>Stockings.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>STONE-<i>Dead</i></title>
<p>quite dead.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>STONE <i>Doublet</i></title>
<p>a Prison.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>STOP</title>
<p>as, <eg>I have stopt his Blubber</eg>;
I have stopt his Mouth.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>STOP-<i>Hole Abbey</i></title>
<p>the Nick-name of
the chief Rendezvous of the Canting
Crew of <i>Gypsies</i>, <i>Cheats</i>,
<i>Thieves</i>, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>STOTER</title>
<p>a great Blow. <eg>Stoter
him</eg>, or, <eg>Tip him a Stoter</eg>; Settle him;
give him a swinging Blow.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>STOW</title>
<p><i>i.e.</i> You have said enough.
<eg>Stow you, bene Cove</eg>; Hold your Peace,
good Fellow. <eg>Stow your Whids and
plant them; for the Cove of the Ken can
cant them</eg>; Take care what you say;
for the Man of the House understands
you.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>STRAPPING</title>
<p>lying with a Wench.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>STRAPPING-<i>Lass</i></title>
<p>a swinging two-handed Woman.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>STRETCHING</title>
<p>hanging. <eg>He will
stretch for it</eg>; He will be hang'd.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title link="ignore"><i>To</i> STRETCH</title>
<p>to tell a Lye; as,
<eg>He stretcht hard</eg>; He told a whicking
Lye.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime,v"><title>STRIKE</title>
<p>to beg or rob; also to
borrow Money. <eg>Strike all the Cheats</eg>;
Rob all that you meet. <eg>Strike the Cull</eg>;
<!--* Page 30 *-->
Beg of that Gentleman. <eg>Strike the
Cloy</eg>; Get the Fellow's Money from
him. <eg>He has struck the Quidds</eg>; He has
got the Money from him. <eg>He strikes
every Body</eg>; He borrows Money every
where; he runs in every one's Debt.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> STRIP</title>
<p>to rob or <i>gut</i> a House,
to unrig any Body; or to <i>bite</i> them of
their Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> STRIP <i>the Ken</i></title>
<p>To <i>gut</i> the
House.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> STRIP <i>the Table</i></title>
<p>To win all
the Money on the Place. <eg>We have stript
the Cull</eg>; We have got all the Fool's
Money. <eg>The Cove's stript</eg>; The Rogue
has not a <i>Jack</i> left to help himself.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>STROMMEL</title>
<p>Strap, or Hair, as,
<eg>She hath good Store of Strommel on her
Nob</eg>.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>STROWLERS</title>
<p>Vagabonds, Itinerants,
Men of no settled Abode, of a
precarious Life, Wanderers of Fortune,
such as Gypsies, Beggars, Pedlars,
Hawkers, Mountebanks, Fidlers,
Country-Players, Rope-dancers, Jugglers,
Tumblers, Shewers of Tricks,
and Raree-show-men.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>STROWLING-<i>Morts</i></title>
<p>who,
pretending to be Widows, often travel
the Countries, making Laces upon
Yews, Beggar's-tape, &c; Are light-finger'd,
subtle, hypocritical, cruel,
and often dangerous to meet, especially
when a <i>Ruffler</i> is with them.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing,bawd"><title>STRUM</title>
<p>a Ferriwig. <eg>Rum-strum</eg>;
A long Wig. Also a handsome Wench,
or Strumpet.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>STUBBLE-<i>It</i></title>
<p>Hold your Tongue.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>STULING-<i>Ken</i></title>
<p>the same as <i>Stalling Ken</i>. Which see.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>SUCK</title>
<p>Wine or strong Drink. <eg>This
is rum Suck</eg>; It is excellent Tipple.
<eg>We'll go and Suck our Faces; but if they
toute us, we'll take Rattle, and brush</eg>;
Let's go to drink and be merry; but if
we be smelt by the People of the
House, we must scowre off. <eg>He loves
to Suck his Face</eg>; He delights in Drinking.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>SUCKY</title>
<p>drunkish, maudling, half-Seas over.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>SUIT <i>and Cloak</i></title>
<p>good Store of
Brandy or any agreeable Liquor.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SUN-<i>Burnt</i></title>
<p>clapt.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SUNNY-<i>Bank</i></title>
<p>a good, rousing
Winter-Fire.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>SUPERNACULUM</title>
<p>not so much as
a Drop left to be poured upon the
Thumb nail, so cleverly was the Liquor
tipt off.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>SU-POUCH</title>
<p>an Hostess or Landlady.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>SUTLER</title>
<p>he that pockets up Gloves,
Knives, Handkerchiefs, Snuff and Tobacco-boxes,
<!--* col *-->
and other lesser Moveables.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>SWADDLERS</title>
<p>Rogues, who, not
content to rob and plunder, beat and
barbarously abuse, andoften murder
the Passengers. Hence, <eg>To seaddle</eg>;
To beat lustily with a Cane, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>SWAG</title>
<p>a Shop. <eg>Rum Swag</eg>; Full
of rich Goods.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> SWAGGER</title>
<p>to vapour or bounce.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>SWEET</title>
<p>easy to be taken in; Also
expert, dexterous, clever: As, <eg>Sweet's
your Hand</eg>; said of one who has the
Knack of stealing by Sleight of Hand.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>SWEETNERS</title>
<p>Guinea-droppers,
Cheats, Sharpers. <eg>To Sweeten</eg>; To
decoy, draw in, and <i>bute</i>. <eg>To be sweet
upon</eg>; To coax, wheedle,entice or
allure.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>SWIG</title>
<p>a draught of Liquor; <eg>To
swig it off</eg>; To drink it all up.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>SWIG-<i>Men</i></title>
<p>carrying small Haberdashery-Wares about, pretending to
sell them, to colour their Roguery.
Fellows crying <i>Old Shoes, Boots, or
brooms</i>; and thos pretending to buy
<i>Old Suits, Hats</i> or <i>Cloaks</i>, are also
called <i>Swig-Men</i>, and oftentimes, if
an Opportunity offers, make all Fish
that comes to Net.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>SWINDGING-<i>Clap</i></title>
<title><i>Swindging Fellow</i></title>
<title><i>Swindging Lye</i></title>
<p>a very great one.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title><i>To</i> SWINDE <i>one off</i></title>
<p>to beat him soundly.</p></entry>
</letter>
<letter name="t"><title>T</title>
<entry c="person,thing"><title>TACKLE</title>
<p>a Mistress; also good
Cloaths. <eg>The Cull has tipt his Tackle
Rum-rigging</eg>, or <eg>has tipt his Bloss
Rum Tackle</eg>; The keeping Coxcomb
has given his Mistress very fine Cloaths.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>TAKE <i>the Culls in</i></title>
<p>Seize the Men
in order to rob them.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TALE-<i>Tellers</i></title>
<p>a sort of Servants in
use with the great Men in <i>Ireland</i>, to
lull them asleep with Stories of a Cock
and a Bull, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TALESMAN</title>
<p>as, <eg>I tell you my Tale,
and my Talesman</eg>, or Author.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>TALL-<i>Boy</i></title>
<p>a Pottle or two Quart
Pot.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TALLY-<i>Men</i></title>
<p>Brokers that let out
Cloaths to wear <i>per</i> Week, Month or
Year. See <i>Rabbit-Suckers</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>TAP</title>
<p>a Blow; a small Tap, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>TAPE, <i>Red</i> or <i>White</i></title>
<p>Geneva,
Aniseed, Clove water, so called by
<i>Canters</i> and <i>Villains</i>, and the Renters
<!--* page 31 *-->
of the Trap, &c; in <i>Newgate</i>, ans other
Prisons.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>TAPLASH</title>
<p>wretched, sorry Drink,
or Hogwash.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>TART <i>Dames</i></title>
<p>sharp, quick, pert.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>TARTAR</title>
<p>a notorious Rogue or
Sharper, who sticks not to rob his
Brother Rogue. Hence <eg>To catch a
Tartar</eg>, is said, among the Canting
Varlets, when a Rogue attacks one
that he thinks a Passenger, but proves
to be of this Clan of Villains, who in
his Turn having overcome the Assailant,
robs, plunders and binds him.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>TATTER-<i>De-mallion</i></title>
<p>a tattered
Beggar, sometimes half naked, with
Design to move Charity, having better
Cloaths at Home. <eg>in Tatters</eg>; in Rags.
<eg>Tattered and Torn</eg>; rent and torn.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>TATTLE</title>
<title>or <i>Tattler</i></title>
<p>an Alarum,
or striking Watch; or indeed any
other Watch.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>TATS</title>
<p>false Dice.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>TAUDRY</title>
<p>garish, gawdy, with
Lace, or mismatched and staring Colours:
A Term borrow'd from those
Times when they trick'd and bedeck'd
the Shrines and Altars of the Saints, as
being at Emulation with each other
upon that Occasion. The Votaries of
St. <i>Audery</i> (in Isle of <i>Ely</i> Saint) exeeding
all the rest in the Dress and
Equipage of their Altar, it grew into a
By-word, upon any thing very gawdy,
that it was <i>All Taudry</i>; as much as to
say, <eg>All St. Audery</eg>.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>TAYLE</title>
<p>a Sword.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>TAYLE <i>Drawers</i></title>
<p>Sword-Stealers.
The same as <i>Wiper-Drawers</i>. <eg>He drew
the Cull's Tayle Rumly</eg>; He whipt away
the Gentleman's Sword cleverly.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>TEAGUE-<i>Land</i></title>
<p>Ireland.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TEAGUE-<i>Landers</i></title>
<p>Irishmen.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>TEARS <i>of the Tankard</i></title>
<p>Drops of
the good Liquor that fall beside.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>TEMPLE <i>Pickling</i></title>
<p>the Pumping of
Bailiffs, Bums, Setters, Pick-Pockets,
&c;</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TENDER-<i>Parnel</i></title>
<p>a very nicely educated
Creature, apt to catch cold on
the least Puff of Wind.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TERCEL <i>Gentle</i></title>
<p>a Knight or Gentleman
of a good Estate; also any
rich Man.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>TERRA-<i>Firma</i></title>
<p>an Estate in Land;
<eg>Has the Cull got any Terra Firma?</eg> Has the
Fool got any Land.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>THE <i>Dragon upon St. George</i></title>
<p>the Woman uppermost.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,rogue"><title>THIEF-<i>Takers</i></title>
<p>who make a Trade
of helping People (for a Gratuity) to
<!--* col *-->
their lost Goods and sometimes, for
Interest, or Envy, snapping the Rogues
themselves, being usually in Fee with
them, and acquainted with their Haunts.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>THOROUGH-<i>Cough</i></title>
<p>farting and
coughing at the same time.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>THOROUGH <i>Passage</i></title>
<p>in at one Ear
and out at t'other.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>THOROUGH <i>Stitch</i></title>
<p>over Shoes,
over Boots.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>THREE <i>Legged Stool</i></title>
<title>or <i>Three legged Mare</i></title>
<p>Tyburn.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>THREE <i>Threads</i></title>
<p>half common Ale,
and half Stout or double Beer.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>THREPPS</title>
<p>Three-pence.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>THROTTLE</title>
<p>Throat or Gullet; <eg>He
siezed is Throttle</eg>: i.e. He took him
by the Throat.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>THRUMS</title>
<p>Three Pence. <eg>Tip me
Thrums</eg>; Lend me Three Pence.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>THUMMIKINS</title>
<p>a Punishment (in
<i>Scotland</i>) by hard squeezing or pressing
of the Thumbs, to extort Confession,
which stretches them prodigiously,
and is very painful. In Camps,
and on Board of Ships, lighted Matches
are clapt between the Fingers to the
same Intent.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>THWACK</title>
<p>to beat with a Stick or
Cudgel.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TIB</title>
<p>a young Lass.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>TIB <i>of the Buttery</i></title>
<p>a Goose.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>TICK</title>
<p>as, <eg>to run on Tick</eg>; To go on
the Score, or Trust.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TICKLE-<i>Pitcher</i></title>
<p>a Tosspot, or Pot-companion.
A lewd Man or Woman.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>TICKRUM</title>
<p>a Licence.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd,drink"><title>TIFFING</title>
<p>lying with a Wench, also
Drinking.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>TILTER</title>
<p>a Sword. <eg>To Tilt</eg>, to fight
with a Rapier. <eg>Run a Tilt</eg>; a swift
Pursuit.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>TINT <i>for Tant</i></title>
<p>Hit for Hit, Dash
for Dash.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>TIP</title>
<p>to give or lend: <eg>Tip your Lour</eg>
or <eg>Cole or I'll mill ye</eg>; Give me your
Money, or I'll kill ye. <eg>Tip the COle to
Adam Tiler</eg>; Give your Pick-pocket
Money presently to your running
Comrade. <eg>Tip the Mish</eg>; Give me the
Shirt. <eg>Tip me a Hog</eg>; Lend me a Shilling.
<eg>Tip it all off</eg>; Drink it all off at
a Draught. <eg>Don't spoil his Tip</eg>; Don't
baulk his Draught. <eg>A Tub of good Tip</eg>;
(for Tipple) a Cask of strong Drink.
<eg>To tip off</eg>, also signifies to die.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>TIPLER</title>
<p>a Fuddle-cap, or Toss pot.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>TIPSY</title>
<p>almost drunk.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing,person"><title>TIT</title>
<p>a Horse; also a young prim
Lass.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>TIT-<i>Bit</i></title>
<p>a fine Snack, or choice
Morsel.</p></entry>
<!--* page 32 *-->
<entry c="thing"><title>TITTLE-<i>Tattle</i></title>
<p>idle, impertinent
Talk.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> TITTER</title>
<p>to laugh at a Feather.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>TITTER-<i>Totter</i></title>
<p>one ready to reel,
at every Jog, or Blast of Wind.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>TOGE</title>
<p>a Coat.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>TOGEMANS</title>
<p>a Gown, or Cloak. <eg>I
have bit the Togemans</eg>; I have stole the
Cloak. <eg>Tis a Rum Togemans lets nim it</eg>;
'Tis a good Camblet-Cloak; lets whip
it off.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing,money"><title>TOKENS</title>
<p>the Plague; also Presents
from one to another; also a Farthing.
<eg>Not a Token left</eg>; Not a Farthing remaining.
<eg>Tom Fools token</eg>; Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>TOL.</title>
<p><i>Toledo</i>, a Sword. <eg>Bite the
Tol</eg>; Steal the Sword. <eg>A Rum Tol</eg>;
A silver hilted Sword. <eg>A Queere Tol</eg>;
A Brass or Steel-hilted or ordinary
Sword.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TOM-<i>Boy</i></title>
<p>a Tom Rig, or Romp.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TOM <i>of Bedlam</i></title>
<p>the same as <i>Abram-Man</i>.
Which See.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TOM-<i>Cony</i></title>
<p>a very silly Felow.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TOM-<i>Thumb</i></title>
<p>a Dwarf or diminutive Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>TOM-<i>Long</i></title>
<p>tedious; as <eg>Come by
Tom Long the Carrier</eg>; of what is very
long a coming.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TONGUE-<i>Pad</i></title>
<p>a smooth, glib-tongued,
insinuating Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TONY</title>
<p>a silly Fellow or Ninny. <eg>A
meer Tony</eg>; a meer Simpleton.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>TOOL</title>
<p>an Implement fit for any
Turn, the Creature of any Cause or
Faction; a meer Property, or Cat's
Foot.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title link="ignore"><i>To</i> TOP</title>
<target>top upon</target>
<p>to cheat or trick any one;
also to insult. <eg>What, do you top upon
me?</eg> Do you stick a little Wax to the
Dice to keep them together, to get the
Chance you would have? <eg>He thought to
have topt upon me</eg>; He designed to have
put upon, sharped, bullied, or affronted
me.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TOP <i>Diver</i></title>
<p>a Lover of Women.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>To TOPE</title>
<p>to drink. <eg>An old Toper</eg>;
a staunch Drunkard. <eg>To tope it about</eg>,
or <eg>Dust it about</eg>; To drink briskly
about.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>TOP-<i>Heavy</i></title>
<p>Drunk.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TOPPING-<i>Fellow</i></title>
<p>who has reach'd
the Pitch and greatest Eminence in any
Art; the Master, and the Cock of his
Profession.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment,place"><title>TOPPING-<i>Cheat</i></title>
<p>the Gallows.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TOPPING-<i>Cove</i></title>
<p>the Hangman.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TORCH-<i>Cul</i></title>
<p>Bum sodder.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>TORIES</title>
<p><i>Irish</i> Thieves or Rapparees.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> TOST</title>
<title>or <i>Toast</i></title>
<p>to name or
begin a new Health. <eg>Who tosts now?</eg>
Who Christens the Health? <eg>An old Tost</eg>;
A pert, pleasant, old Fellow.</p></entry>
<!--* Col *-->
<entry c="adj"><title>TOTTY-<i>Headed</i></title>
<p>giddy-headed,
hare-brained.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title brace="right"><i>To</i> TOUR</title>
<title><i>To</i> TOUT</title>
<p>to look out sharp, to be
upon one's Guard. <eg>Who
touts?</eg> Who looks out sharp? <eg>Tout the
Culls</eg>; Eye those Folks which way they
take. <eg>Do you tout and bulk, and I'll
file</eg>; If you'll eye and jostlehim, I will
pick his Pockets.</p></entry>
<entry c="place,drink"><title>TOUTING-<i>Ken</i></title>
<p>a Tavern or Ale-house Bar.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>TOWER <i>Hill Play</i></title>
<p>a Slap on the
Face and a Kick on the Breech.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TOWN-<i>Bull</i></title>
<p>one that rides all the
Women he meets.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>TOWER</title>
<p>a <i>Cant Word</i>, used to denote
bad, or clipped Money: as, <eg>They
have been round the Tower with it</eg>; te he
Piece of Money has been clipt.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>TRACK</title>
<p>to go. <eg>Track up the Dancers</eg>;
Whip up the Stairs.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title>TRANSNEAR</title>
<p>to come up with any
Body.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TRANSLATORS</title>
<p>Sellers of old
Shoes and Boots, between Shoemakers
and Cobblers; also that turn or translate
out of one Language into another.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>TRANSMOGRIFY</title>
<p>or rather <i>Transmigrafy</i>,
to alter or new vamp.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>TRANTER</title>
<p>See <i>Crocker</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>TRAPAN</title>
<p>he that draws in or
wheedles a <i>Cull</i>, and <i>Bites</i> him. <eg>Trapann'd</eg>;
sharp'd, ensnar'd.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TRAPES</title>
<p>a dangling Slattern.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>TRES-WINS</title>
<p>Three Pence.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TRIGRY-<i>Mate</i></title>
<p>an idle She-companion.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>TRIP</title>
<p>a Prison. <eg>He is in Trib</eg>, for
<i>Tribulation</i>; He is laid by the Heels,
or in a great deal of Trouble.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>TRIM</title>
<p>Dress. <eg>In a sad Trim</eg>; dirty,
undress'd. <eg>A Trim Lad</eg>; A spruce,
neat, well trick'd Man.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>TRIMMING</title>
<p>cheating People
of their Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment,place"><title><i>To</i> TRINE</title>
<p>to hang; also <i>Tyburn</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>TRINING</title>
<p>hanging.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>TRINKETS</title>
<p>Toys and Trifles.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>TRINGUM-TRANGUM</title>
<p>a Whim or Maggot.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>TRIPE</title>
<p>the Belly or Guts.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing,person"><title>TRIP</title>
<p>a short Voyage or Journey;
also an Error of the Tongue, or Pen;
a Stumble, a false Step, a Miscarriage.
Also a Bastard.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TROT</title>
<p>as, <eg>An old Trot</eg>, a sorry,
base, old Woman. <eg>A Dog Trot</eg>; A
pretty Pace.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>TROTTERS</title>
<p>Feet, usually Sheeps.
<eg>Shake your Trotters</eg>; Troop off, be
gone.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> TROLL<i>About</i></title>
<p>to saunter, loiter,
or wander about.</p></entry>
<!--* page 33 -->
<entry c="thing"><title>TROLLOP</title>
<p><eg>a A great Trollop</eg>, a lusty
coarse Romp.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>TROOPER</title>
<p>a half Crown.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>TROUNCED</title>
<p>troubled, cast in Law
punished.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TRUG</title>
<p>a dirty Puzzle, an ordinary
sorry Woman.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>TRULL</title>
<p>a Whore, also a Tinker's
travelling Wife or Wench.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>TRUMPERY</title>
<p>old Ware, old Stuff.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>TRUNDLERS</title>
<p>Pease.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>TRUNK</title>
<p>a Nose<eg>How fares your
old Trunk?</eg> Does your Nose stand fast?</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TRUSTY-<i>Trojan</i></title>
<title>or <i>Trusty Trout</i></title>
<p>a sure Friend or Confidant.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>TUCK'D</title>
<p>hang'd.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>TUMBLER</title>
<p>a Cart. <eg>To shove the
Tumbler</eg>; To be whipt at the Cart's
Tail; also one that decoys, or draws
others into play; and one that shews
Tricks with and without a Hoop.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TURK</title>
<p>any cruel hard-hearted
Man.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TURKEY <i>Merchants</i></title>
<p>Drivers of Turkeys.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>TURKISH-<i>Shore</i></title>
<p><i>Lambeth</i>, <i>Southwark</i>
and <i>Rotherhith</i> Side of the Water.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>TURKISH-<i>Treatment</i></title>
<p>very sharp or
ill dealing in Business.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>TURN-<i>Coat</i></title>
<p>he that quits one and
embraces another Party.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>TURNIP <i>Pate</i></title>
<p>white or Fair-hair'd.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>TWEAK</title>
<p>as <eg>In a Tweak</eg>; in a heavy
Taking, much vexed or very angry.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>TWELVER</title>
<p>a Shilling.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> TWIG</title>
<p>to disingage, to sunder,
to snap, to break off; as, <eg>To twig the
Darbies</eg>; To knock off the Irons.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>TWIST</title>
<p>half Tea, half Coffee:
Likewise Brandy and Eggs mixed. Hot-Pot.
Also to Eat; as, <eg>To twist lustily</eg>;
To feed like a Farmer.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title link="ignore"><i>To</i> TWIST</title>
<p>to eat heartily.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>TWISTED</title>
<p>executed, hanged.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> TWIT</title>
<p>to hit in the Teeth.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> TWITTER</title>
<p>to laugh much
with little Noise; also to tremble.</p></entry>
</letter>
<letter name="uv"><title>U, V</title>
<entry c="thing"><title>VAGARIES</title>
<p>wild Rambles, extravagant Frolicks.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>VAGRANT</title>
<p>a wandering Rogue, a
strolling Vagabond.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>VAIN-<i>Glorious</i></title>
<p>or <i>Ostentatious Man</i>,
one that boasts without Reason, or, as
the <i>Canters</i> say, <eg>pisses more than he
drinks</eg>.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>VALET</title>
<p>a Servant.</p></entry>
<entry c="v,thing"><title><i>To</i> VAMP</title>
<p>to parn anything. [[pawn?]]
<eg>I'll
<!--* col *-->
Vamp, and tip you the Cole</eg>; I'll pawn
my Cloaths, but I'll raise the Money
for you. <eg>To Vamp</eg>; To new dress,
liquer, refresh or rub up old Hats,
Boots, Shoes &c; Also a Sock.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>VAMPERS</title>
<p>Stockings.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>VAN</title>
<p>as <eg>Madam Van</eg>. See <i>Madam</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>VARLETS</title>
<p>now Rogues, Rascals,
&c; tho' formerly Yeomens Servants.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title><i>To</i> VAULT</title>
<p>as, <eg>To Vault</eg>, to commit
Acts of Debauchery.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>VAULTING-<i>School</i></title>
<p>a Bawdy-house.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>VELVET</title>
<p>a Tongue. <eg>Tip the Velvet</eg>; To tongue a Woman.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing,person"><title>VINEGAR</title>
<p>a Cloak; also the Fellow
that makes a Ring, and keeps
Order amongst Wrestlers, Dudgel-Players, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>VIRAGO</title>
<p>a masculine Woman, or
a great two-handed Female.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>UNRIG'D</title>
<p>stripp'd, undress'd. <eg>Unrig
the Drab</eg>; pull all the Whore's
Cloaths off.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>UNTWISTED</title>
<p>undone, ruin'd.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>UNWASH'D <i>Bawdry</i></title>
<p>rank, fulsom
Bawdry.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>UPHILS</title>
<p>high Dice.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>VOUCHERS</title>
<p>that put off false Money
for sham Coiners. Also one that
warrants Gagers or under Officers Accompts,
either at the Excise Office;
or elsewhere.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>UPPISH</title>
<p>rampant, crowing, full of
Money. <eg>He is very Uppish</eg>; He is well-lined
in the Fob; also brisk.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>UPRIGHT-MEN</title>
<p>As, an <eg>Upright-man</eg>,
signifies the chief or Principal of a
Crew. The vilest stoutest Rogue in
the Pack, is generally chosen to this
Post, and he has the sole Right to the
fist Night's Lodging with the <i>Dells</i>,
who afterwards are used in common
among the whole Fraternity. He
carries a short Truncheon in his
Hand, which he calls his <i>Filchman</i>, and
has a larger Share than ordinary of
whatsoever is gotten in the Society.
He often travels in Company with 30
or 40 Males and Females, <i>Abram-Men</i>,
and others, over whom he presides arbitrarily;
and sometimes the Women
and Children, who are unable to travel,
or fatigued, are by Turns carry'd
in Panniers bu an Ass or two, or by
some poor Jades which they procure
for that Purpose. <eg>Go Upright</eg>, said by
Taylors and and Shoemakers, to their
Servants, when any Money is given
to make them drink, and signifies,
<meaning><i>Bring it all out in Drink</i></meaning>, tho' the Donor
intended less, and expects Change,
or some Return of Money.</p></entry>
<!--* page *-->
<entry c="thing" sortas="VPSTARTS"><title>UPSTARTS</title>
<p>new raised to Honour.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,thing" sortas="VRCHIN"><title>URCHIN</title>
<p>a little sorry Fellow; also
a Hedge-hog.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>URINAL <i>of the Planets</i></title>
<p><i>Ireland</i>, with
us, because of its frequent and great
Rains; as <i>Heidelberg</i>, and <i>Cologn</i> in
<i>Germany</i>, have the same Name upon
the same Account; also a Chamber-pot,
or Glass.</p></entry>
</letter>
<letter name="w"><title>W</title>
<entry c="v"><title>WADDLE</title>
<p>to go like a Duck.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>WAG</title>
<title><i>Waggish</i></title>
<p>arch, gamesome, pleasant.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>WALLOWISH</title>
<p>a malkish, ill Taste.</p></entry>
<entry c="v,bawd"><title><i>To</i> WAP</title>
<p>to lie with a Man. <eg>If she
won't wap for a Win, let her trine for a
Make</eg>; if she won't lie with a Man for
a Penny, let her hang for a Half-penny.
<eg>Mort wap-apace</eg>; a Woman
of Experience, or very expert at the
Sport.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>WAPPER-<i>Eyed</i></title>
<p>that has sore or
running Eyes.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>WAPPING</title>
<p>the Act of Coition.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>WARM</title>
<p>well lined of flush in the
Pocket.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>WARMING-<i>Pan</i></title>
<p>an old fashion'd
large Watch. <eg>A Scotch Warming-Pan</eg>;
a She-bed-fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,place,bawd"><title>WARREN</title>
<p>he that is Security for
Goods taken up on Credit, by extravagant
young Gentlemen; also a
Boarding-school, or a Bawdy-house,
which are too much the same Thing.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>WASH</title>
<p>Paint for Faces.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>WASPISH</title>
<p>peevish.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>WATER-<i>Pad</i></title>
<p>one that robs Ships,
Hoys, Lighters, Barges or Boats in the
River of <i>Thames</i>. A sort of BADGERS. Which see.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>WATTLES</title>
<p>Ears; also Sheep-folds.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>WEB</title>
<p>Cloth of any Sort.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing,money"><title>WEDGE</title>
<p>Plate, or Silver or Gold
Moveables and trinkets: Also Money.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>WELSH <i>Fiddle</i></title>
<title>or <i>Scotch-Fiddle</i></title>
<p>the Itch.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue,bawd"><title>WESTMINSTER-<i>Wedding</i></title>
<p>a
Whore and a Rogue married together.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink,person"><title>WET-<i>Quaker</i></title>
<p>a Drunkard of that Sect.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>WHEADLE</title>
<p>a Sharper. <eg>To cut a
Wheadle</eg>; to decoy, by Fawning and
Insinuation.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>WHEEL-<i>Band in the Nick</i></title>
<p>regular
drinking over the left Thumb.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>WHETSTONE's <i>Park</i></title>
<p>a Lane betwixt
<i>Holbourn</i> and <i>Lincoln's-Inn-Fields</i>,
formerly a noted Nest for Whores,
now dispark'd.</p></entry>
<!--* col *-->
<entry c="thing"><title>WHIDS</title>
<p>Words.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> WHIDDLE</title>
<p>to enter into a Parley,
to compound with, or take off by
a Bribe; as, <eg>Did you Whiddle with the
Cull?</eg> Did you bribe or compound with
the Evidence? Also to impeach, or
discover; as, <eg>He Whiddles</eg>; He Peaches.
<eg>He Whiddles the whole Scrap</eg>; He
discovers all he knows. <eg>The Cull has
whiddled, because we would not tip him
a Snack</eg>; The Dog has discovered because
we did not give him a Share.
<eg>They Whiddle-Thief, and we must Brush</eg>;
They cry out Thieves, and we must
fly.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>WHIDDLER</title>
<p>a Peacher (or rather
Impeacher) of his Gang.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>WHIG-<i>Land</i></title>
<p>Scotland.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>WHINERS</title>
<p>Prayers, Supplications, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>WHIP-<i>Shire</i></title>
<p>Yorkshire.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>WHIPSTER</title>
<p>a sharp, or subtle
Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title><i>To</i> WHIP <i>off</i></title>
<p>to steal, to drink cleverly,
to snatch and to run away.
<eg>Whipt through the Lungs</eg>; Run through
the Body with a Sword. <eg>Whipt in at
the Glaze</eg>; Got in at the Window.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>WHIM</title>
<p>a Maggot.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>WHIMSICAL</title>
<p>maggotish.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>WHIMPER</title>
<p>a low or small Cry.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>WHINDLE</title>
<p>a low or feigned Cry.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> WHINE</title>
<p>to cry squeekingly.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>WHINYARD</title>
<p>a Sword.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>WHIPPER-<i>Snapper</i></title>
<p>a very small
sprightly Boy.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>WHIP-<i>Jacks</i></title>
<p>counterfeit Mariners
begging with false Passes, pretending
Ship-wrecks, great Losses at Sea, narrow
Escapes, &c; telling dismal Stories,
having learnt <i>Tar-Terms</i> on purpose:
but are meer Cheats, and will
not stick to rob a Booth at a Fair, or
an House in soem By-road. They
often carry their Morts or Wenches,
which the pretend to be their Wives,
whom they miraculously saved in the
Shipwreck, altho' all their Children
were drowned, the Ship splitting on
a Rock near the <i>Lands-End</i>, with such
like Forgeries.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>WHIRLEGIGS</title>
<p>Testicles.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>WHISK</title>
<p>a little inconsiderable, impertinent Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>WHISKER</title>
<p>a great Lye.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>WHISKINS</title>
<p>shallow, brown Bowls
to drink out of.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing,drink"><title>WHISTLE</title>
<p>the Throat. <eg>Wet your
Whistle</eg>: liquor your Throat.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title>WHIT</title>
<p>Newgate. As, <eg>Five Rum-padders,
are rub'd in the Darkmans and
of the Whit, and are pik'd into the Deuseaville</eg>;
Five Highway-men in the
<!--* page *-->
Night broke <i>newgate</i>, and are gone
into the Country.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>WHITE-<i>Chappel-Portion</i></title>
<p>two torn
Smocks, and what Nature gave.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>WHITE-<i>Tape</i></title>
<p>See <i>Tape</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>WHITE <i>Wool</i></title>
<p>Silver.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>WHITHER-<i>D'ye-go</i></title>
<p>an insolent
prescribing, <i>very</i>, Wife.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>WHORE's <i>Kitling</i></title>
<title>or <i>Whore's Son</i></title>
<p>a Bastard.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>WHOW-<i>Ball</i></title>
<p>a Milk-maid.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>WIBBLE</title>
<p>sad Drink.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>WICKET</title>
<p>a Casement, also a little
Door. As, <eg>Tout through the Wicket,
and see where a Cully pikes with his
Gentry mort, whose Muns are the Rummest
I ever touted before</eg>; Look through
the Casement, and see where the Man
walks with a Gentlewoman, whose
Face is the fairest, I have ever seen.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>WICHER-<i>Cully</i></title>
<p>See <i>Witcher-Cully</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing,person"><title>WIDOWS-<i>Weeds</i></title>
<p>mourning
Cloaths. <eg>A Grass-Widow</eg>; One that
pretends to have been married, but
never was, yet has Children.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>WILD <i>Rogues</i></title>
<p>such as are trained
up from Children to <i>Nim</i> golden or
silver Buttons off of Coats, to creep in
at Cellar and Shop-windows, and to
slip in at Doors behind People; also
that have been whipt, burnt in the
Fist, and often in Prison for Roguery.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>WILES</title>
<p>Tricks, Intrigues, cunning
Stratagems.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>WILY</title>
<p>cunning, crafty, intriguing.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing,person"><title>WILLING-<i>Tit</i></title>
<p>a little Horse that
Travels chearfully; also a coming Girl.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>WILLOW</title>
<p>poor, and of no Reputation.</p></entry>
<entry c="v,money"><title>WIN</title>
<p>a Penny. <eg>To win</eg>; To steal.
<eg>Won</eg>; Stollen. <eg>The Cull has won a
Couple of rum Glimsticks</eg>; The Rogue
has stole a pair of Silver Candlesticks.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>WIND-<i>Fall</i></title>
<p>a great Fortune fallen
unexpectedly by the Death of a Friend.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>WINDY-<i>Fellow</i></title>
<p>without Sense or
Reason.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>WIND-<i>Mills in the Head</i></title>
<p>empty
Projects.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>WINK</title>
<p>a Signal or Intimation. <eg>He
tipt the Wink</eg>; He gave the Sign or Signal.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>WINNINGS</title>
<p>Money, or Reward:
<eg>Winnings for Wapping</eg>; Money given a
Woman for lying with her.</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>WIPE</title>
<p>a Blow; also a Reflection.
<eg>He tipt him a rum Wipe</eg>; He gave him
a swinging Blow. <eg>I gave him a Wipe</eg>;
I spoke something that cut him, or
gaul'd him. <eg>He wip'd his Nose</eg>; He
gull'd him.</p></entry>
<!--* col *-->
<entry c="thing"><title>WIPER</title>
<p>a Handkerchief. <eg>Nim the
Wiper</eg>; To steal the Handkerchief.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>WIPER-<i>Drawer</i></title>
<p>a Handkerchief-stealer.
<eg>He drew a broad, narrow, cam,
or speck'd Wiper</eg>; He pick'd Pockets of
a broad, or narrow, Ghenting, Cambrick,
or colour'd Handkerchief.</p></entry>
<entry c="crime"><title>WIRE-<i>Draw</i></title>
<p>a Fetch or Trick to
wheedle in <i>Bubbles</i>; also to screw,
over-reach, or deal hard with. <eg>Wire-drawn</eg>;
so served or treated.</p></entry>
<entry c="rogue"><title>WISE <i>Man of Gotham</i></title>
<p>a Fool.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> WIT</title>
<p>to know or understand.</p></entry>
<entry c="place"><title><i>The</i> WIT</title>
<p><i>Newgate</i>, <i>New Prison</i>, or
<i>Bridewell</i>. The same as <i>Whit</i>.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>WITCHER</title>
<p>Silver.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>WITCHER-<i>Bubber</i></title>
<p>a Silver Bowl.
<eg>The Cull is piked with the Witcher-bubber</eg>
The Rogue is marched off with
the Silver-bowl.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>WITCHER-<i>Cully</i></title>
<p>a Silver-smith.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>WITCHER-<i>Tilter</i></title>
<p>a Silver-hilted
Sword. <eg>He has bit, or drawn the
Witcher-tilter</eg>; He has stole the Silver-hilted Sword.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> WOBBLE</title>
<p>to boil. <eg>The Pot wobbles</eg>; i.e. The Pot boils;
the Meat is enough.</p></entry>
<entry c="bawd"><title>WOMAN <i>of the Town</i></title>
<p>a Prostitute,
or common Harlot.</p></entry>
<entry c="drink"><title>WOMBLE-<i>Ty-Cropt</i></title>
<p>the Indisposition
of a Drunkard after a Debauch in
Wine or other Liquors: As, <eg>He is
Womble-ty Cropt</eg>; He is Cropsick, &c;</p></entry>
<entry c="punishment"><title>WOODEN-<i>Ruff</i></title>
<p>a Pillory. <eg>He wore
the Wooden-ruff</eg>; He stood in the Pillory.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>WOOD-<i>Pecker</i></title>
<p>a By-stander that
bets, while others game.</p></entry>
<entry c="phrase"><title><i>In a</i> WOOD</title>
<title>or, <i>In a Maze</i></title>
<p>In a
Peck of Troubles; being in a Doubt,
or at a Loss, what Course to take, by
Reason of some very critical Turn in
one's Affairs; or, among <i>Canters</i>, by
being surpriz'd, and in great Danger
of being taken, in a Robbery, or any
other unlawful Act.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>WOOLLY-<i>Crown</i></title>
<p>a soft-headed
Fellow.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>WOOL-<i>Gathering</i></title>
<p>as, <eg>Your Wits
are a Wool gathering</eg>; said of a Person
in a serious, or, as 'tis called, in a
brown Study; or who knows not
what he does.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>WORD-<i>Pecker</i></title>
<p>one that plays with
Words: A Punster.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>WORM'D</title>
<p>undermined, rooked,
cheated, tricked; <eg>Wormed out of</eg>, inveigled
out of, or deluded.</p></entry>
</letter>
<!--* page 36 *-->
<letter name="x"><title>X</title>
<entry c="person"><title>XANTIPPE</title>
<p>a Scold; the Name of
<i>Socrates</i>'s scolding Wife; who
never cold move his Patience, tho' by
premeditated and repeated Injuries.
Whence it is used for any Shrew, or
scolding, brawling Woman.</p></entry>
</letter>
<letter name="y"><title>Y</title>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> YAM</title>
<p>to eat heartily, to stuff
lustily.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>YARMOUTH-<i>Capon</i></title>
<p>a red Herring.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>YARMOUTH-<i>Coach</i></title>
<p>a sorry slow
Cart to ride on, drawn by one Horse.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>YARMOUTH-<i>Pye</i></title>
<p>made of Herrings,
highly spic'd, and presented by
the City of <i>Norwich</i> annually to the
King, on pain of forfeiting their Charter.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>YARUM</title>
<p>Milk, or Food made of
Milk.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>YEA-<i>and-Nay-Men</i></title>
<p>a Phrase originally
applied to Quakers; but now
used for any simple Fellows.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>YELLOW</title>
<p>at first used by the <i>Canters</i>
<!--* col *-->
only, but now in common Speech,
for being jealous.</p></entry>
<entry c="money"><title>YELLOW-<i>Boy</i></title>
<p>a Guinea, or Piece
of Gold of any Coin.</p></entry>
<entry c="v"><title><i>To</i> YELP</title>
<p>(from the <i>Yelping</i> of a Dog)
to cry, to bawl, to complain.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>YELPER</title>
<p>a Town-Cryer; also, one
subject to complain, or make pitiful
Lamentation for trifling Incidents.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>YEST</title>
<p>a Diminutive of <i>Yesterday</i>; a
Day ago.</p></entry>
<entry c="adj"><title>YOAK'D</title>
<p>married.</p></entry>
<entry c="person"><title>YORKSHIRE-<i>Tike</i></title>
<p>a <i>Yorkshire</i>
Manner of Man.</p></entry>
</letter>
<letter name="z"><title>Z</title>
<entry c="adj,person"><title>ZAD</title>
<p>crooked, like the letter Z;
as, <eg>A meer Zad</eg>, used of any
bandy-legg'd, crouch-back'd or deformed
Person.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,rogue"><title>ZANY</title>
<p>a Mountebank's Merry-Andrew,
or Jester, to distinguish him
from a Lord's Fool.</p></entry>
<entry c="person,rogue"><title>ZLOUCH</title>
<title>or <i>Slouch</i></title>
<p>a slovenly ungenteel
Man.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>ZNEES</title>
<p>Frost, or Frozen; <eg>Zneesy
weather</eg>; Frosty Weather.</p></entry>
<entry c="thing"><title>ZNUZ</title>
<p>the same as <i>Znees</i>.</p></entry>
</letter>
<!--* page 36 *-->
</dict>