Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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[UK] Sl. Dict. 97: Snob, a low, vulgar person.
at snob, n.
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at crap, v.2
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at eat a fig, v.
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at church a yack, v.
[UK] Sl. Dict. 185: Guy to get away. Same as hedge in street phraseology, which see.
at guy-a-whack, v.
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at take a fright, n.
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at block a hat, v.
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at three quarters (of a peck), n.
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at Cain and Abel, n.
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at Flemish account, n.
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at long acre, n.
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at added to the list, phr.
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at maids adorning, n.
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at bucket afloat, n.
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at I’m afloat, n.
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at I’m afloat, n.
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at cut and come again, n.
[UK] Sl. Dict. 149: Draft on Aldgate Pump, an old mercantile phrase for a fictitious banknote or fraudulent bill.
at draft on the pump at Aldgate, n.
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at catch ’em (all) alive-o, n.
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at string (along), v.
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at girl and boy, n.
[UK] Sl. Dict. 185: The term half-and-half is also applied to the issue of marriages between gipsies and ‘white people’.
at half-and-half, n.
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at lath and plaster, n.
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at night and day, n.
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at tom-and-jerry (shop) (n.) under tom and jerry, n.1
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at cow and calf, v.
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at east and south, n.
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at long-and-shorts, n.
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at puddings and pies, n.
[UK] Sl. Dict.
at yea and nay (man), n.
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