Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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Court Satires of the Restoration choose

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[UK] ‘On the Ladies of the Court’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 4: Jermyn’s tarse Will claw her arse And make her soon rebound.
at arse, n.
[UK] ‘On the Ladies of the Court’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 4: For all her pride, Her cony’s wide; She needs not be so haughty.
at cony, n.
[UK] ‘On the Ladies of the Court’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 4: Though her cunt be not so rough, / She makes it up in motion.
at cunt, n.
[UK] ‘On the Ladies of the Court’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 6: Scroope, they say, hath no good breath, / But yet she’s well enough beneath, / And hath a good figary.
at figary, n.
[UK] ‘On the Ladies of the Court’ in J.H. Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 3: Mayne and Steward played at flats.
at flats, n.1
[UK] in J.H. Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 3: Strangely pleasant were their Chatts, / When Mayne and Steward play’d at flatts [ [...] / Till Charles came there, / And with his ware / Taught how their father got them.
at flats, n.1
[UK] ‘On the Ladies of the Court’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 5: ’Twas Carlisle’s gun / That made her so disloyal.
at gun, n.1
[UK] ‘On the Ladies of the Court’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 6: Waldgrave is now out of date, / For all her servants now of late, / Have found her breath so stinking!
at servant, n.
[UK] ballad in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 12: She swives like a stoat, / Goes to’t leg and foot, / Level coil with a prince and a player.
at play (at) level-coil (v.) under play (at)..., v.
[UK] ‘Ballad’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 11: Next comes Castlemaine, / That prerogative quean; / If I had such a bitch I would spay her.
at bitch, n.1
[UK] ‘Ballad’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 11: Old fatguts himself, / With his tripes and his pelf, / With a purse as full as his paunch.
at fatguts (n.) under fat, adj.
[UK] ‘Ballad’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 11: Old fatguts himself [...] Will confess that his Nanny / Fopdoodled her Jemmy, / And his kingdom is come to the haunches.
at fopdoodle, v.
[UK] ‘Lampoon’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 21: But now she must travel abroad / And be forced to frig with the nuns.
at frig, v.
[UK] ‘Ballad’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) n.p.: His Nanny Fopdoodled her jemmy.
at jemmy, n.2
[UK] ‘Ballad’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 11: Old fatguts himself, / With his tripes and his pelf, / With a purse as full as his paunch.
at pelf, n.
[UK] ‘Ballad’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 11: And Dapper his clerk, Being true to the mark, / Was at once both his scribe and his setter.
at setter, n.1
[UK] ‘Ballad’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 11: Next comes Castlemaine, / That prerogative quean; / If I had such a bitch I would spay her. / She swives like a stoat, / Goes to’t leg and foot.
at swive, v.
[UK] ‘Ballad’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 11: Old fatguts himself, / With his tripes and his pelf, / With a purse as full as his paunch.
at tripe, n.1
[UK] ‘Lampoon’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 20: [The Duchess of] Cleveland was doubtless to blame / On such a he-whore to dote.
at he-whore, n.
[UK] ‘Colin’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 24: They said a cunt so used to puke / Could never bear a booby duke.
at booby, adj.1
[UK] ‘Colin’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 25: Then in came dowdy Mazarin, / That foreign antiquated quean / Who soon was told the King no more / Would deal with an intriguing whore, / That she already had about her / Too good an equipage de foutre.
at foutre, v.
[UK] ‘Colin’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 25: She knew his ways and could comply / With all decays of lechery; Had often licked his amorous sceptre / Until the jaded stallion leapt her.
at leap, v.
[UK] ‘Colin’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 26: The roaring roist’rers of Whitehall.
at roaring, adj.
[UK] ‘Colin’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 25: She knew his ways and could comply / With all decays of lechery; Had often licked his amorous sceptre / Until the jaded stallion leapt her.
at sceptre, n.
[UK] ‘Colin’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 25: She knew his ways and could comply / With all decays of lechery; Had often licked his amorous sceptre / Until the jaded stallion leapt her.
at stallion, n.
[UK] ‘Colin’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 26: Nor was our monarch such a cully / To bear a Moor and swinging bully.
at swinging, adj.1
[UK] ‘Ballad on Betty Fulton’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 48: She’s always attended with ballocks and tarse, / Sweet Candish in cunt and bold Frank at her arse.
at arse, n.
[UK] ‘Ballad on Betty Felton’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 48: She’s always attended with ballocks and tarse, / Sweet Candish in cunt and bold Frank at her arse.
at ballocks, n.
[UK] ‘On Several Women about Town’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 33–4: There was a bouncing widow […] [and] a bonny young maid […] A lusty young fellow they’d each of them got, / That trounced ’em and bounced ’em until they were hot, / Then took ’em aside to do I know not what.
at bounce, v.1
[UK] ‘Ballad on Betty Felton’ in Wilson Court Satires of the Restoration (1976) 48: Quickly chastizes all pricks in rebellion, / And is able to break a whole catso battalion.
at catso, n.
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