1964 A. Hine Unsinkable Molly Brown 33: ‘Ankle along, sister,’ the woman said in a gruff voice. ‘I got this side of the street spoken for.’.at ankle, v.
1964 A. Hine Unsinkable Molly Brown 142: I sure as blank wasn’t ready for a blankety-blank watery grave, so I just blank well took the others along with me.at blank, n.
1964 A. Hine Unsinkable Molly Brown 36: ‘Can you handle the box?’ he asked Molly. ‘What box?’ [...] ‘The pianna.’.at box, n.1
1964 A. Hine The Unsinkable Molly Brown 15: The Binks boys hadn’t wrassled with Molly in a coon’s age.at coon’s age (n.) under coon, n.
1964 A. Hine Unsinkable Molly Brown 136: Is there [...] any single simple ding-dong little thing I ever did that was really me?at ding-dong, adj.2
1964 A. Hine Unsinkable Molly Brown 26: Pretty doodads and a pretty little pet to wear ’em.at doodad, n.
1964 A. Hine Unsinkable Molly Brown 95: ‘Mud in your eye, Father,’ Johnny toasted.at here’s mud in your eye!, excl.
1964 A. Hine Unsinkable Molly Brown 61: You’re sozzled to the eyeballs!at to the eyeballs (adv.) under eyeball, n.2
1964 A. Hine Unsinkable Molly Brown 91: Bring me back three dozen — make it four against anybody gettin’ orey-eyed and breakin’ some.at ory-eyed, adj.
1964 A. Hine Unsinkable Molly Brown 24: Gert [...] helped herself to a six-finger helping of Hank Kimmel’s best popskull.at popskull, n.
1964 A. Hine Unsinkable Molly Brown 9: Who’s going to take care of you when you’re wanting a little ring-dang-do.at ring-dang-do (n.) under ring, n.
1964 A. Hine Unsinkable Molly Brown 63: We had us a fight and he walked out on me. Right spang after the weddin’.at spang, adv.