Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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The Icky-Wickey Songster choose

Quotation Text

[UK] ‘Bill Hart and Kitty Miles’ in Icky-Wickey Songster 22: Bill thought as how the joke he’d pass, / So points to his moke, and cried, ‘Ax my ass!’.
at ask my...!, excl.
[UK] ‘The Trap Door’ in Icky-Wickey Songster 45: One night she was boarded by a young ’squire / And the very next day, found her flue was on fire.
at board, v.1
[UK] ‘Bill Hart and Kitty Miles’ in Icky-Wickey Songster 21: He cocked his tail, and vos off like bricks.
at like bricks (adv.) under bricks, n.
[UK] ‘The Chapter of Smutty Toasts’ in Icky-Wickey Songster 9: Here’s the pleasant placed waterfall ’mid Bushy Park.
at Bushey Park, n.1
[UK] ‘Some Love to Stand’ Icky-Wickey Songster 14: Then on the Mall, ve’ll treat our gal, / And for business, right and hot.
at business, n.
[UK] ‘The Chapter of Smutty Toasts’ in Icky-Wickey Songster 8: Here’s the thatched house, the miraculous can!
at can, n.1
[UK] ‘The Chapter of Smutty Toasts’ in Icky-Wickey Songster 9: [as cit. 1768].
at custom house, n.
[UK] ‘The Seduction of Jim Crow’ Icky-Wickey Songster 11: Such a great big cut / Between her legs she had.
at cut, n.1
[UK] ‘The Trap Door’ Icky-Wickey Songster 46: ‘Dash my buttons,’ he cried.
at dash my buttons! (excl.) under dash, v.1
[UK] ‘The Female Workwoman’ in Icky-Wickey Songster 44: He [...] hammered my kettle with all his might.
at hammer, v.1
[UK] ‘The Chapter of Smutty Toasts’ in Icky-Wickey Songster 8: Here’s the thatched house, the miraculous can!
at thatched house (under the hill), n.
[UK] ‘The Butcher’s Tail and The Lamb’s Stones’ in Icky-Wickey Songster 5: My own private joint, and my own private stones.
at joint, n.
[UK] ‘The Female Workwoman’ in Icky-Wickey Songster 44: He [...] hammered my kettle with all his might.
at kettle, n.1
[UK] ‘The Chapter of Smutty Toasts’ in Icky-Wickey Songster 8: Here’s the hole that receives, and the man that can feel, / May he always be able to stand a good deal.
at man, n.
[UK] ‘The Chapter of Smutty Toasts’ in Icky-Wickey Songster 8: Here’s the soldier’s long musket.
at musket, n.
[UK] ‘Bill Hart and Kitty Miles’ in Icky-Wickey Songster 21: Bill’s rigging vos all bran span new.
at span new, adj.
[UK] ‘Chapter of Smutty Toasts’ Icky-Wickey Songster 10: Here’s what they all like, which is man’s rolling-pin.
at rolling-pin, n.
[UK] ‘Sambo’s Black Pudding’ Icky-Wickey Songster 34: The sight made his black pudding swell.
at black pudding (n.) under pudding, n.
[UK] ‘Bill Hart and Kitty Miles’ in Icky-Wickey Songster 21: Bill’s rigging vos all bran span new.
at rigging, n.1
[UK] ‘She Couldn’t Make Him Stand’ Icky-Wickey Songster 17: She rubbed him up, she rubbed him down, / But she couldn’t make him stand.
at rub up, v.
[UK] ‘The Butcher’s Tail and The Lamb’s Stones’ in Icky-Wickey Songster 7: She presented her spouse with a nice little son, / The spit of the butcher, so every one owns.
at spit, n.2
[UK] ‘The Butcher’s Tail & The Lamb’s Stones!’ Icky-Wickey Songster 5: I wants a long tail, and two tender lamb’s stones.
at stone, n.1
[UK] ‘Sambo’s Black Pudding’ in Icky-Wickey Songster 34: The black [...] held in his hand his black towser. / The lady looked at it with joy, / For she never had seen such a teazer.
at teaser, n.4
[UK] ‘The Chapter of Smutty Toasts’ in Icky-Wickey Songster 9: Here’s the pleasant placed waterfall.
at waterfall (n.) under water, n.1
[UK] ‘My Frisky Old Wife’ Icky-Wickey Songster 47: She works me twelve times every night.
at work, v.
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