Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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[UK] J. Walker Pronouncing Dict. 42/1: Balderdash, Rude mixture.
at balderdash, n.
[UK] J. Walker Pronouncing Dict. 58/2: Bonny-clabber, Sour buttermilk.
at bonny-clapper, n.
[UK] J. Walker Pronouncing Dict. 59/1: To Boom, To rush with violence.
at boom, v.
[UK] J. Walker Pronouncing Dict. 60/2: Bousy, Drunken.
at bousy, adj.
[UK] J. Walker Pronouncing Dict. 73/2: To Carbonado, to cut or hack.
at carbonado, v.
[UK] J. Walker Pronouncing Dict. 125/2: Crack-Hemp, A wretch fated to the gallows.
at crack halter (n.) under crack, v.2
[UK] J. Walker Pronouncing Dict. 259/2: Horn mad, perhaps mad as a cuckold.
at horn-mad, adj.
[UK] J. Walker Pronouncing Dict. 267/2: Jigumbob, A trinket, a knick-knack. A cant word.
at jiggumbob, n.
[UK] J. Walker Pronouncing Dict. 350/1: Mughouse, An alehouse, a low house of entertainment.
at mughouse (n.) under mug, n.1
[UK] J. Walker Pronouncing Dict. 377/1: Pad, The road, a footpath.
at pad, n.1
[UK] J. Walker Pronouncing Dict. Pad, [...] an easy-paced horse.
at pad, n.1
[UK] J. Walker Pronouncing Dict. 377/1: To Pad, [...] to rob on foot.
at pad, v.1
[UK] J. Walker Pronouncing Dict. 377/1: Padder, A robber a foot highway man.
at padder, n.1
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