Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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A Cure for the Heart Ache choose

Quotation Text

[UK] T. Morton Cure for the Heart Ache in Inchbold (1808) XXV 10: The farmers so consated, drive about in their chay-carts.
at chay, n.
[UK] T. Morton A Cure for the Heart Ache in Inchbold (1808) XXV 44: The road had a bit of a circumbendibus; – hate corners, – so I jumped the hedge.
at circumbendibus, n.
[UK] T. Morton A Cure for the Heart Ache in Inchbold (1808) XXV 30: A plum! Oh, sweet, agreeable, little, short word!
at plum, n.2
[UK] T. Morton A Cure for the Heart Ache in Inchbold (1808) XXV 24: Push off – brush – run!
at push off (v.) under push, v.
[UK] T. Morton Cure for the Heart Ache in Inchbold (1808) XXV 24: Come along, dad – push on, my dear dad [...] keep moving.
at push on (v.) under push, v.
[UK] T. Morton A Cure for the Heart Ache in Inchbold (1808) XXV 56: Dom’me, how the old Baronet has been roasted.
at roast, v.
[UK] T. Morton A Cure for the Heart Ache in Inchbold (1808) XXV 58: Here I am, tip-top spirits – ripe for any thing.
at tip-top, adj.
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