Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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The Sparkling Songster choose

Quotation Text

[UK] ‘Ax My A-se’ in Sparkling Songster 45: I sports my togs in Regent-street, / A pretty tidy beat I’ve got.
at beat, n.1
[UK] ‘Jack Sheppard The Rover’ Sparkling Songster 41: Now Jack, he was so fond of cun-he, / Went to cut his master’s wizzen, / All for to give these whores some money.
at cunny, n.
[UK] ‘The Cadger’s Christening’ in Sparkling Songster 21: Peg Pullcock did loudly declare, / That she had the largest old grummit.
at grummet, n.
[UK] ‘Old Randy Moll’ in Sparkling Songster 35: I’d go out for a lush, with my flashman on a spree.
at lush, n.1
[UK] ‘Ax My A-se’ in Sparkling Songster 45: I can show a tuzzy hairy, / Good for a slap up job [...] Vith my bluzzey, tuzzy, muzzy.
at tuzzy-muzzy, n.
[UK] ‘Ax My A-se’ in Sparkling Songster 45: I take my ware all over town / Upon the pave I’m well known.
at on the pavement under pavement, n.
[UK] ‘Old Randy Moll’ Sparkling Songster 36: She felt an itching in her quim, and when she went to pee, / She found she’d got a scalding, and a stain on her chimee.
at pee, v.
[UK] ‘Old Randy Moll’ Sparkling Songster 36: The pizzle that had pox’d her, was as foul as foul could be.
at pox, v.
[UK] ‘The Industrious Wife’ Sparkling Songster 17: She toils just like a slave, / The rhino to bring in, sir.
at rhino, n.1
[UK] ‘Jack Sheppard The Rover’ in Sparkling Songster 40: Jack lov’d his master’s darter, / But she gave him turnips.
at give someone turnips (v.) under turnip, n.
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