nipper n.3
1. (US) a small measure of spirits.
Flash (NY) 4 Sept. n.p.: [She] has administered as many three-cent ‘nippers’ as any lady in the profession. | ||
Whip & Satirist of NY & Brooklyn (NY) 4 Feb. n.p.: [He] has affixed his signature to the pledge of total abstinence and no more ‘nippers’ or ‘ponies’. |
2. a baby; a young boy (pre-teenage).
Dict. Sl. 68: nipper, a small boy. | ||
, , | Sl. Dict. [as cit. 1859]. | |
Sl. Dict. 237: Nipper a sharp lad. | ||
Chequers 54: They calls it a stream, but I dussn’t say wot I thinks it is afore the nipper. | ||
🎵 I’ve got a little nipper, when ’e talks I’ll lay yer forty shiners to a quid You’ll take ’im for the father, me the kid. | ‘Our Little Nipper’||
W.A. Sun. Times (Perth) 9 Jan. 1/2: The average Australian ‘nipper’s’ knowledge of racing minutiæ, although highly interesting and instructive, is not altogether calculated to assist him when the starting-orders go up for Life's Handicap. | ||
Hooligan Nights 2: I lived there when I was a nipper. | ||
Truth (Sydney) 20 Jan. 5/7: [of a 12-year-old girl] Up them stairs the nipper slips, and / Soon the door is locked. | ||
‘The Horses’ in Roderick (1972) 704: He’ll come in handy for one of the nippers to ride now’n then. | ||
Dew & Mildew 252: — Been vaccinated lately?’ ‘No, not since I was a nipper’. | ||
On the Anzac Trail 83: ‘How about buying the old lady out [i.e. of sweets] and filling up the nippers?’ he said. | ||
Man with Two Left Feet ) 122: A little freckled nipper he was when I first knew him. | ‘The Making of Mac’s’ in||
Anderby Wold (1981) 168: And how‘s the nipper? By Jove, the very image of his father. | ||
Boy in Bush 64: Same’s all the nips round here. He went t’ same school. | ||
Last Poems 48: Behold the end of all my woes – / The nipper in his Sunday clothes, / The missus blooming like a rose, Blighty! | ‘Blighty’ in||
Night and the City 202: Even when you was a nipper, you was like that. | ||
Otterbury Incident 65: Give yer sixpence if yer stays ’ere beside me for ’arf an hour, you two nippers. | ||
Fowlers End (2001) 181: I got a sweet tooth. I never ’ad enough sweet stuff when I was a nipper. | ||
Night to Make the Angels Weep (1967) II xii: When Sin was a nipper, he was got at in the fields by a gang from the hollow. | ||
Saved Scene iii: An’ the nip’s mother reckons ’e ain’ got a blame ‘isself. | ||
Inside the Und. 53: Give you a good piece of advice [...] Same as I always tell the nippers. | ||
Only Fools and Horses [TV script] Let me remind you Rodney that you were a six-year-old little nipper when God smiled on Mum and made her die! | ‘Big Brother’||
It Was An Accident 83: He’d been taking us to court on the old fines since we were nippers. | ||
I, Fatty 89: The poor nipper was so scared he shook. | ||
Empty Wigs (t/s) 101: Here's a seagull, obese with rum’n’raisin / from a nipper's cone. |
3. a boy who hires himself out to a costermonger or market greengrocer.
(con. 1840s–50s) London Labour and London Poor I 33/2: Some lads, however, are the smallest class of costermongering youths; and are soometimes called ‘cas’alty boys,’ or ‘nippers’. | ||
Aus. Sl. Dict. 53: Nipper,, a sharp lad. |
4. a small, short person.
Loneliness of the Long-Distance Runner (1960) 22: Mike was a nipper compared to me. | ‘Loneliness of the Long-Distance Runner’ in
5. (Aus,) in a shearing shed a youngster used to perform odd jobs, e.g. make tea.
Intractable [ebook] I was too little to help the roustabouts so the shearers made me the nipper – I boiled the billy for smoko and lunch and generally helped out where I could. |