AWA ARTHUR; KING ARTHUR. A game used at sea, when near the line, or in a hot latitude. It is performed thus: A man who is to represent king Arthur,ridiculously dressed, having a large wig made out of oakum, or some old swabs, is seated on the side, or over a large vessel of water. Every person in his turn is to be ceremoniously introduced to him, and to pour a bucket of water over him, crying, hail,king Arthur! if during this ceremony the person introduced laughs or smiles (to which his majesty endeavours to excite him, by all sorts of ridiculous gesticulations), he changes place with, and then becomes, king Arthur, till relieved by some brother tar, who has as little command over his muscles as himself. ARTICLES. Breeches; coat, waistcoat, and articles. ARTICLE. A wench. A prime article. A handsome girl. She's a a prime article (Whip slang), she's a devilish good piece, a hell of a goer. ASK, or AX MY A--E. A common reply to any question; still deemed wit at sea, and formerly at court, under the denomination of selling bargains. See BARGAIN. ASSIG. An assignation. ATHANASIAN WENCH, OF QUICUNQUE VUlt. A forward girl, ready to oblige every man that shall ask her. AUNT. Mine aunt; a bawd or procuress: a title of eminence for the senior dells, who serve for instructresses,midwives, &c. for the dells. Cant. See DELLS. AUTEM CACKLE TUB. A conventicle or meeting-house for dissenters. Cant. AUTEM DIPPERS. Anabaptists. Cant. AUTEM DIVERS. Pickpockets who practice in churches; also churchwardens and overseers of the poor. Cant. AUTEM GOGLERS. Pretended French prophets. Cant. AUTEM MORT. A married woman; also a female beggar with several children hired or borrowed to excite charity. Cant. AUTEM QUAVERS. Quakers. AUTEM QUAVER TUB. A Quakers' meeting-house. Cant. AWAKE. Acquainted with, knowing the business. Stow the books, the culls are awake; hide the cards, the fellows know what we intended to do. 1 เ BAL BABES IN THE WOOD. Criminals in the stocks, or pillory BABBLE. Confused, unintelligible talk, such as was used at the building the tower of Babel. BACK BITER. One who slanders another behind his back, i. e. in his absence. His bosom friends are become his back biters, said of a lousy man. BACKED. Dead. He wishes to have the senior, or old square-toes, backed he longs to have his father on six men's shoulders; that is, carrying to the grave. BACK UP. His back is up, i. e. he is offended or angry; an expression or idea taken from a cat; that animal, when angry, always raising its back. An allusion also sometimes used to jeer a crooked man; as, So, Sir, I see somebody has offended you, for your back is up. BACON. He has saved his bacon; he has escaped. He has a good voice to beg bacon; a saying in ridicule of a bad voice. BACON-FACED. Full-faced. BACON FED. Fat, greasy. BACK GAMMON PLAYER. A sodomite. BACK DOOR (USHER, or GENTLEMAN OF THE). The same. BAD BARGAIN. One of his majesty's bad bargains; a worthless soldier, a malingeror. See MALINGEROR.. BADGE. A term used for one burned in the hand. He has got his badge, and piked; he was burned in the hand, and is at liberty. Cant. BADGE-COVES. Parish Pensioners. Cant. BADGERS. A crew of desperate villains who robbed near rivers, into which they threw the bodies of those they murdered. Cant. BAG. He gave them the bag, i. e. left them. BAG OF NAILS. He squints like a bag of nails; i. e. BAKERS DOZEN. Fourteen; that number of rolls being al- BAKER-KNEE'D. One whose knees knock together in walking, as if kneading dough. BALDERDASH. Adulterated wine. BALLOCKS. The testicles of a man or beast; also a vulgar nick name for a parson. His brains are in his ballocks, a cant saying to designate a fool. BALUM RANCUM. A hop or dance, where the women are all prostitutes. N. B. The company dance in their birthday suits. BALSAM BAR BALSAM. Money. BAM. A jocular imposition, the same as a humbug. See TO BAM. To impose on any one by a falsity; also to To BAMBOOZLE. To make a fool of any one, to humbug or BANAGHAN. He beats Banaghan; an Irish saying of one BANDOG. A bailiff or his follower; also a very fierce BANG UP. (Whip.) Quite the thing, hellish fine. Well done. Compleat. Dashing. In a handsome stile. A bang up cove; a dashing fellow who spends his money freely. To bang up prime: to bring your horses up in a dashing or fine style: as the swell's rattler and prads are bang up prime; the gentleman sports an elegant carriage and fine horses. BANGING. Great; a fine banging boy. BANG STRAW. A nick name for a thresher, but applied to all the servants of a farmer. BANKRUPT CART. A one-horse chaise, said to be so called by a Lord Chief Justice, from their being so frequently used on Sunday jaunts by extravagant shopkeepers and tradesmen. BANKS'S HORSE. A horse famous for playing tricks, the property of one Banks. It is mentioned in Sir Walter Raleigh's Hist. of the World, p. 178; also by Sir Kenelm Digby and Ben Jonson. BANTLING. A young child. BANYAN DAY. A sea term for those days on which no meat is allowed to the sailors: the term is borrowed from the Banyans in the East Indies, a cast that eat nothing that had life. BAPTIZED, OR CHRISTENED. Rum, brandy, or any other spirits, that have been lowered with water. BARBER'S CHAIR. She is as common as a barber's chair, in which a whole parish sit to be trimmed; said of a pros titute. BARBER'S SIGN. A standing pole and two wash balls. BARGAIN. 3 BAS BARGAIN. To sell a bargain; a species of wit, much in vogue about the latter end of the reign of Queen Anne, and frequently alluded to by Dean Swift, who says the maids of honour often amused themselves with it. It consisted in the seller naming his or her hinder parts, in answer to the question, What? which the buyer was artfully led to ask. As a specimen, take the following instance: A lady would come into a room full of company, apparently in a fright, crying out, It is white, and follows me! On any of the company asking, What? she sold him the bargain, by saying, Mine a--e. BARGEES. (Cambridge.) Baige-men on the river. BARKER. The shopman of a bow-wow shop, or dealer in second hand clothes, particularly about Monmouth-Street, who walks before his master's door, and deafens every passenger with his cries of---Clothes, coats, or gowns---what d'ye want, gemmen ?---what d'ye buy? See Bow-wow SHOP. BARKSHIRE. A member or candidate for Barkshire, said of one troubled with a cough, vulgarly styled barking. BARKING IRONS. Pistols, from their explosion resembling the bow-wow or barking of a dog. Irish. BARN. A parson's barn; never so full but there is still room Bounce cry the port-holes, out they fly," BARNACLE. A good job, or snack easily got: also shellfish growing at the bottoms of ships; a bird of the goose kind; an instrument like a pair of pincers, to fix on the noses of vicious horses whilst shoeing; a nick name for spectacles, and also for the gratuity given to grooms by the buyers and sellers of horses. BARREL FEVER. He died of the barrel fever; he killed himself by drinking. BARROW MAN. A man under sentence of transportation; alluding to the convicts at Woolwich, who are principally employed in wheeling barrows full of brick or dirt. BARTHOLOMEW BABY. A person dressed up in a tawdry manner, like the dolls or babies sold at Bartholomew fair. BASKET. An exclamation frequently made use of in cockpits, at cock-fightings, where persons refusing or unable to pay their losings, are adjudged by that respectable as sembly 津 BEA sembly to be put into a basket suspended over the pit,there BASKET-MAKING. The good old trade of basket-making; TO BASTE. BASTING. A beating. BASTONADING. Beating any one with a stick; from baton, a stick, formerly spelt baston. BAT. A low whore: so called from moving out like bats in the dusk of the evening. BATCH. We had a pretty batch of it last night; we had a hearty dose of liquor. Batch originally means the whole quantity of bread baked at one time in an oven. BATTNER. An ox: beef being apt to batten or fatten those BATCHELOR'S FARE. Bread and cheese and kisses. BATTLE-ROYAL. A battle or bout at cudgels or fisty-cuffs, BAWBEE. A halfpenny. Scotch. BAWBELS, or BAWBLES. Trinkets; a man's testicles. BAWDY BASKET. The twenty-third rank of canters, who BAWDY-HOUSE BOTTLE. A very small bottle; short measure being among the many means used by the keepers of those houses, to gain what they call an honest livelihood: indeed this is one of the least reprehensible; the less they give a man of their infernal beverages for his money, the kinder they behave to him. BAY FEVER. A term of ridicule applied to convicts, who sham illness, to avoid being sent to Botany Bay. BAYARD OF TEN TOES. To ride bayard of ten toes, is to walk on foot. Bayard was a horse famous in old romances. BEAK. A justice of peace, or magistrate. Also a judge or chairman who presides in court. I clapp'd my peepers full of tears, and so the old beak set me free; I began to weep, and the judge setme free. BEAN |