Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘The Careless Good-Fellow’ Poems (1752) 238: Let the poor Herd of German Princes / Their Bacon save.
at save one’s bacon (v.) under bacon, n.1
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘On Mris. F-----n’ Poems (1752) 82: ’Tis all the World to twenty Pound / His Ball---s are the Cause.
at ballocks, n.
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘Marriage Song’ Poems (1752) 96: Push till the Muggles [i.e. orgasm] seize the Fair And the unruly breaks his Bridle.
at bridle, n.
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘To a Humdrum Company’ Poems (1752) 240: Come, let us toss one round in Brimmers.
at brimmer, n.
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘Advice of Momus to Chloe’ Poems (1752) 81: Since Celadon no more is pleas’d / With your obsequious Bum, / To lay the Tickling he has rais’d / Ev’n, Chloe, take your Thumb.
at bum, n.1
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘Marriage Song’ in Poems (1752) 96: Push on, push on, ye happy Pair! [...] Till one complains a ruin’d Butt, / And t’other points a pithless Arrow.
at butt, n.1
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘To Mr. Wright’ in Poems (1752) 99: Your Head is not empty / No more than your Cods.
at cods, n.1
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘Dialogue btwn Captain Low & his Friend Dick’ Poems (1752) 256: Because my Lord had but one P---k / To saitisfy my Lady’s C-ny.
at cunny, n.
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘A Song’ Poems (1752) 275: You may thrum on the Fiddle, as she can well dance / And like two merry Beggars may feast.
at dance, v.
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘Dutch Industry’ Poems (1752) 126: At th’upper End she cracks her Nuts, While at the nether End her Honour.
at end, n.
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘A Lady who was twice married, to Hymen’ in Poems (1752) 84: I’ve got an Engine limber like a Clout.
at engine, n.
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘Letter from St--n to Lord James Murray’ Poems (1752) 285: Whereat he storm’d, he star’d, he stamp’d, / He farted and he slang, Sir.
at fart, v.
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘A Song’ Poems (1752) 275: You may thrum on the Fiddle, as she can well dance / And like two merry Beggars may feast.
at fiddle, n.1
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘On Mris. F-----n’ in Poems (1752) 83: So to a House of Office streight / A School-Boy does repair, / To ease his Postern of its Weight, / And fr-- his P---- there.
at frig, v.
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘Dialogue between Captain Low & his Friend Dick’ Poems (1752) 256: But she gave Proof that she could f--k, / Or she is damnably bely’d.
at fuck, v.
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘A Lady who was twice married, to Hymen’ Poems (1752) 84: O gracious Hymen! cure this dire Mishap, Sow up this mighty Rent, or fill the Gap.
at gap, n.1
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘Spoke by an Old Man’ in Poems (1752) 80: To plow the Ground on Venus’ Field.
at Venus’s highway, n.
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘A la mode de France’ Poems (1752) 269: She ne’er to a Horn-pipe would frisk any more.
at hornpipe, n.
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘On Mris. F-----n’ Poems (1752) 83: So to a House of Office streight / A School-Boy does repair, / To ease his Postern of its Weight, / And fr-- his P---- there.
at house of office (n.) under house, n.1
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘On Mris. F-----n’ in Poems (1752) 82: Unless his full spermatick Sluice / Was ready to run o’er, / Who’d spill a Drop of wholsom Juice / On such a stinking Whore?
at juice, n.1
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘On a Lady of Pleasure’ in Poems (1752) 80: [title].
at lady of pleasure (n.) under lady, n.
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘Dutch Industry’ in Poems (1752) 126: At th’ upper End she cracks her Nuts, / While at the nether End her Honour.
at nether end (n.) under nether, adj.
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘Epigram on Chloe’ Poems (1752) 186: And as one guides me to the Nick, / The other cries – Put up thy -----.
at nick, n.2
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘The Wheel of Life’ Poems (1752) 47: Then fill about a Bumper to the Brim, / Till all repeat it round, and ev’ry Noddle swim.
at noddle, n.
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘A Song on Mris. B---s’s small Indisposition’ in Poems (1752) 182: A band of young Swains an Appointment had made, / To exchange their true Hearts with the Nymphs of the Shade.
at nymph of darkness (n.) under nymph, n.
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘Spoke by an Old Man’ Poems (1752) 80: To plow the Ground on Venus’ Field.
at plough, v.
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘To One [...] turned Prostitute’ Poems (1752) 108: Could’st thou believe thy youthful Grace, / Expos’d in every bawdy Place, / To a contagious pocky Race.
at pocky, adj.
[Scot] Robertson of Struan Poems (1752) 256: My Lord had but one p--k To satisfy my Lady’s C-ny.
at prick, n.
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘Marriage Song’ Poems (1752) 96: Push on, push on, ye happy Pair!
at push, v.
[Scot] Robertson of Struan ‘To Mr. Wright’ in Poems (1752) 98: Dear sweet Mr. Wright / Give over your banter, / Go rodger to-night / Your Wife, for ye want her.
at roger, v.1
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