Peg Trantum’s n.
In phrases
to die; thus pegtrantum(s) adj., dead.
Maronides (1678) V 43: Where’s Menetus? gon [sic] to Peg Trantum. | ||
Dict. Canting Crew n.p.: Peg Trantums Gone to Pegtrantums, Dead. | ||
New Canting Dict. [as cit. c.1698]. | ||
, , , | Universal Etym. Eng. Dict. [as cit. c.1698]. | |
, , | Classical Dict. of the Vulgar Tongue. | |
New Dict. Cant (1795) n.p.: peg tantrums, dead. | ||
Dict. Sl. and Cant [as cit. a.1790]. | ||
Lex. Balatronicum. | ||
Flash Dict. [as cit. a.1790]. | ||
Grose’s Classical Dict. of the Vulgar Tongue. | ||
Andrew Jackson 40: Hays [...] giv’d him several woonds and wou’d have sent him to Peg Trantums. | ||
Modern Flash Dict. [as cit. a.1790]. | ||
Londonderry Sentinel 16 Jan. 4/5: If he shakes the nonsense out iv Cooke [...] I’m his man; but to Peg Trantum’s back parlour with him if he disn’t. | ||
Flash Dict. in Sinks of London Laid Open [as cit. a.1790]. | ||
New and Improved Flash Dict. n.p.: Peg tandrums as gone to peg tandrums, dead and buried. | ||
Vocabulum 66: pegtrantum Dead. |