Attractive Fashionable Man In Modern Parlance Crossword Clue
In case the clue doesn't fit or there's something wrong please contact us! The present edition, therefore, will be found much more complete than the First; indeed, I may say that it has been entirely rewritten, and that, whereas the First contained but 3, 000 words, this gives nearly 5, 000, with a mass of fresh illustrations, and extended articles on the more important slang terms—HUMBUG, for instance. SWINDLER, although a recognised word in respectable dictionaries, commenced service as a slang term. The costers consider themselves the best players in London. Attractive fashionable man in modern parlance. MOONEY, intoxicated. E. S. Taylor supplies me with the following note from his MS. additions to the work of the East-Anglian lexicographer:—. This provokes a Scotchmen in the highest degree, it implying that he is afflicted with the itch.
In East Anglia, to SNAFFLE is to talk foolishly. A few years ago the term CASE was applied to persons and things; "what a CASE he is, " i. e., what a curious person; "a rum CASE that, " or "you are a CASE, " both synonymous with the phrase "odd fish, " common half-a-century ago. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works 1. Low people generally ask an acquaintance to WET any recently purchased article, i. e., to stand treat on the occasion; "WET your whistle, " i. e., take a drink; "WET the other eye, " i. e., take another glass. UNCLE, the pawnbroker. The same term is applied to horses in a similar condition. First, there's money, with one hundred and twenty Slang terms and synonymes; then comes drink, from small beer to champagne; and next, as a very natural sequence, intoxication, and fuddlement generally, with some half a hundred vulgar terms, graduating the scale of drunkenness from a slight inebriation, to the soaky state of gutterdom and stretcherdom, —I pray the reader to forgive the expressions. "Vain trifles as they seem, clothes have, they say, more important offices than to merely keep us warm. Attractive fashionable man in modern parlance crossword clue. Persons of modern tastes will be shocked to know that the great Lord Bacon spoke of the lower part of a man's face as his GILLS. LONDON: JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN, PICCADILLY. A tinker's budget is from the same source. PENNY-A-LINER, a contributor of local news, accidents, fires, scandal, political and fashionable gossip, club jokes, and anecdotes, to a newspaper; not regularly "on the paper;" one who is popularly believed to be paid for each contribution at the rate of a penny a line, and whose interest is, therefore, that his article should be horribly stuffed with epithets. The BUMMAREES are accused of many trade tricks. PRAD NAPPING, horse stealing.
Although in the Introduction I have divided cant from slang, and treated the subjects separately, yet in the Dictionary I have only, in a few instances, pointed out which are slang, or which are cant terms. During the Crimean war, PLUCKY, signifying courageous, seemed likely to become a favourite term in May-Fair, even among the ladies. So also DACHA-ONE, i. e., dieci uno, elevenpence. "—John Bee, in the Introduction to his Slang Dictionary, 1825. SLOUR'D, buttoned up; SLOUR'D HOXTER, an inside pocket buttoned up. Half-a-couter, half-a-sovereign. And have I been sitting all this while with a hangman? If not, it had a vulgar or cant introduction into this country. A correspondent suggests that meat is usually DONE BROWN before being DISHED, and conceives that the latter term may have arisen as the natural sequence of the former. German, FRAU; Dutch, VROUW. In this view, unusual answers are colored depending on how often they have appeared in other puzzles. FUNNY-BONE, the extremity of the elbow—or rather, the muscle which passes round it between the two bones, a blow on which causes painful tingling in the fingers. The etymologies attempted are only given as contributions to the subject, and the derivation of no vulgar term is guaranteed.
From the notoriety which attended the fraud, and the magnitude of the swindle, any one who cheated or defrauded was said to chiaous, or chause, or CHOUSE; to do, that is, as this Chiaous had done. 8d One standing on ones own two feet. Originally, a spoilt or effeminate boy, derived from COCKERING, or foolishly petting a person, rendering them of soft or luxurious manners. SICES, or SIZES, a throw of sixes at dice. "Marée signifie toute sorte de poisson de mer qûi n'est pas salé; bonne marée—marée fraiche, vendeur de marée. From TESTONE, a shilling in the reign of Henry VIII., but a sixpence in the time of Q. Elizabeth. Was a common rejoinder to a "stiff yarn. "
ANY HOW, in any way, or at any rate, bad; "he went on ANY HOW, " i. e., badly or indifferently. DAISY KICKERS, the name hostlers at large inns used to give each other, now nearly obsolete. QUEER BAIL, worthless persons who for a consideration would stand bail for any one in court. BUB, drink of any kind. WHALE, "very like a WHALE in a teacup, " said of anything that is very improbable; taken from a speech of Polonius in Hamlet. UPPER STOREY, or UPPER LOFT, a person's head; "his UPPER STOREY is unfurnished, " i. e., he does not know very much. Hackles are the long feathers on the back of a cock's neck, which he erects when angry, —hence the metaphor. Old cant for a shop. 23, "in our low estate. " PEPPER, to thrash, or strike. Virgil has an exactly similar phrase, in pejus ruere. CHAP, a fellow, a boy; "a low CHAP, " a low fellow—abbreviation of CHAP-MAN, a huckster. BUM, the part on which we sit.
Another name for it is a TYBURN COLLAR. CABBAGE, pieces of cloth said to be purloined by tailors. HARD LINES, hardship, difficulty. CLAGGUM, boiled treacle in a hardened state, Hardbake.
The Jews preferred paying the ransom, although often very heavy. GREENE'S (Robert) Groundworke of Conny-Catching, the manner of their PEDLERS' FRENCH, and the meanes to understand the same, with the cunning slights of the Conterfeit Cranke. This crossword clue might have a different answer every time it appears on a new New York Times Crossword, so please make sure to read all the answers until you get to the one that solves current clue. In ancient times, when a king was short of cash, he generally issued orders for so many Jew's eyes, or equivalent sums of money. NYT crossword was launched in 1942. WINKIN, "he went off like WINKIN, " i. e., very quickly.
7 The vulgar tongue consists of two parts: the first is the Cant Language; the second, those burlesque phrases, quaint allusions, and nick names for persons, things, and places, which, from long uninterrupted usage, are made classical by prescription. Synonymous with THROWING THE HATCHET. CHEAP, "doing it on the CHEAP, " living economically, or keeping up a showy appearance with very little means. BLOW UP, to make a noise, or scold; formerly a cant expression used amongst thieves, now a recognised and respectable phrase.