2. (colloquial).—A mistress; a mash (q.v.).
3. In. pl. (venery).—The sex—or that part of it which is given to unchastity—in general; hence the girls = lechery.
After the girls. He’s been after the girls, verb. phr. (common).—Said of one with clap or pox.
Girl and Boy, subs. phr. (rhyming). A saveloy.
Girlery, subs. (colloquial).—A brothel. Also a theatre for burlesque and comic opera.
Girl-getter, subs. (colloquial).—A mincing, womanish male.
Girling. To go Girling, verb. phr. (venery).—To quest for women; to go on the loose (q.v.).
Girlometer, subs. (venery).—The penis. Also, Girl-catcher. For synonyms, see Creamstick and Prick.
Girl-shop, subs. phr. (common).—A brothel.
Girl-show, subs. phr. (common).—A ballet, a burlesque, a leg-piece (q.v.).
Girl Street. In Hair Court, Girl Street, subs. phr. (common).—Generic for fornication. Also the female pudendum.
Girl-trap, subs. phr. (common).—A seducer; a mutton-monger (q.v.).
Git! (or You Git!), intj. (American).—Be off with you! An injunction to immediate departure; walker! (q.v.). Sometimes a contraction of get out! Also get out and dust!
1851. Seaworthy, Bertie, p. 78. Thrue as the tin commandhers! Git aout!
To have no git up and git, phr. (American).—To be weak, vain, mean, or slow—generally deprecatory.
Give, verb. (vulgar).—1. To lead to; to conduct; to open upon: e.g., ‘The door gave upon the street.’ Cf. the idiomatic use, in French, of donner.
2. (American).—An all-round auxiliary to active verbs: e.g., to give on praying = to excel at prayer; to give on the make = to be clever at making money, etc.
To give it to, verb. phr. (old).—1. To rob; to defraud.—Grose.
2. (common).—To scold; to thrash. Also to give what for; to give it hot; to give something for oneself; to give one in the eye, etc. [150]Fr., aller en donner. For synonyms, see Wig and Tan respectively.
1612. Chapman, Widow’s Tears, Act i., p. 312 (Plays, 1874). This braving wooer hath the success expected; the favour I obtained made me witness to the sport, and let his confidence be sure, I’ll give it him home.
1835. Dickens, Sketches by Boz, p. 134. ‘Take that,’ exclaimed Mr. Samuel Wilkins.… ‘Give it him,’ said the waistcoat.… Miss J’mima Ivins’s beau and the friend’s young man lay gasping on the gravel, and the waistcoat and whiskers were seen no more.
1889. J. M. Barrie in Time, Aug. p. 148. When he said he would tell everybody in the street about there being a baby, I gave him one in the eye. Ibid. If it’s true what Symons Tertius says, that Cocky has gone and stolen my reminiscences about Albert’s curls, putting it into his reminiscences like as if it was his own, I’ll give him it hot.
To give in (or out), verb. phr. (colloquial).—To admit defeat; to yield; to be exhausted; to throw up the sponge. See Floored and Cave in.
1748. Smollett, Rod. Random, ch. xviii. Strap, after having received three falls on the hard stones, gave out, and allowed the blacksmith to be the better man.
1760–1. Smollett, L. Greaves, vol. II., ch. viii. By this time the doctor had given out, and allowed the brewer to be the better man.
1819. Moore, Tom Crib, p. 25. Poor Georgy gave in.
1837. Lytton, Ernest Maltravers, bk. IV., ch. ix. Your time is up … you have had your swing, and a long one it seems to have been—you must now give in.
1847. Robb, Squatter Life, p. 99. Jest about then both on our pusses gin out.
1850. Buffum, Six Months in the Gold Mines, p. 73. After working three days with the machine, the earth we had been washing began to give out.
1852. Dickens, Bleak House, ch. xxiv., p. 217. I am surprised to hear a man of your energy talk of giving in.
To give away, verb. phr. (American).—To betray or expose inadvertently; to blow upon (q.v.): to peach (q.v. for synonyms). Also to give dead away. Largely used in combination: e.g., give-away = an exposure; give-away cue = an underhand revelation of secrets.
1883. F. M. Crawford, Doctor Claudius, ch. vi., p. 100. It always amused him to see sanguine people angry. They looked so uncomfortable, and gave themselves away so recklessly.
1886. A. Lang, Longman’s Mag., VII., 321. I know not whether the American phrase, to give a person away, to give yourself away, meaning to reveal your own or another’s secret, is of provincial English origin. Did it cross over with the Pilgrim Fathers in the May Flower, or is it a recent bit of slang? ‘Who giveth this woman away?’ asked the rural American parson in the wedding service. ‘I could,’ came the voice of a young man from the gallery, ‘but I’d never be so mean.’
1888. Detroit Free Press, Aug. Careful what we say, for it will give us dead away.
1889. Answers, 20 Apr., p. 326. My closely cropped hair, however, gave me away.
1892. R. L. Stevenson and L. Osbourne, The Wrecker, p. 195. For the sake of the joke I’ll give myself away.
To give one best, verb. phr. (schoolboys’).—1. To acknowledge one’s inferiority, a defeat. Also (thieves’) to leave, to cut (q.v.).
1887. Horsley, Jottings from Jail. But after a time I gave him best (left him), because he used to want to bite my ear (borrow) too often.
To give the collar, verb. phr. (American).—To seize; to arrest; to collar (q.v.). For synonyms, see Nab.
To give the bullet (sack, bag, kick-out, pike, road, etc.), verb. phr. (common).—To discharge from an employ. [151]
Give us a rest! phr. (American).—Cease talking! An injunction upon a bore.
To give nature a fillip, verb. phr. (old).—To indulge in wine or women.—B. E. (1690).
To give way, verb. phr. (colloquial).—To permit the sexual embrace: by women only.
1870. Weekly Times, 1 May. She was sorry to say, she gave way to him. (Laughter.) Mr. Maude remarked she was a foolish woman, and, being a widow, ought to have known what giving way would come to.—Complainant said of course she did, but she thought he meant to marry her.
[Other combinations will be found under the following: auctioneer; back cap; bag; bail; baste; beans; beef; biff; black eye; bone; bucket; bullet; bull’s feather; clinch; double; fig; gas; go by; gravy; hoist; hot beef; jesse; kennedy; key of the street; land; leg up; lip; miller; mitten; mouth; needle; office; points; pussy; rub of the thumb; sack; sky-high; slip; tail; taste of cream; turnips; weight; white alley; word.]
Giver, subs. (pugilistic).—A good boxer; an artist in punishment (q.v.).
1824. Reynolds, (‘Peter Corcoran’), The Fancy, p. 73. She knew a smart blow from a handsome giver Would darken lights.
Gixie, subs. (obsolete).—A wanton wench; a strumpet; an affected mincing woman.
1598. Florio, Worlde of Wordes. Faina, a mincing, coie, nice, puling, squeamish woman, an idle huswife, a flurt, a gixgi. Also as Foina [i.e., ‘a pole-cat’; while Foirare = ‘to lust for beastly leacherie, to be salt as a bitch.’]
1611. Cotgrave, Dictionarie, s.v. Gadrouillette, a minx, gigle, flirt, callet gixie: (a fained word applyable to any such cattell). [See further, gadriller (a wench) = ‘to rump or play the rig’].
Gizzard, to fret one’s gizzard, verb. phr. (common).—To worry oneself. See Fret.
To stick in one’s gizzard, verb. phr. (common).—To remain as something unpleasant, distasteful or offensive; to be hard of digestion; to be disagreeable or unpalatable.
c. 1830. Finish of Tom and Jerry, p. 241. It had always stuck in his gizzard to think as how he had been werry cruelly used.
To grumble in the gizzard, verb. phr. (common).—To be secretly displeased. Hence, grumble-gizzard (q.v.).
Gladstone, subs. (common)—1. Cheap claret. [Mr. Gladstone, when in office in 1869, reduced the duty on French wines.] See Drinks.
1876. Besant and Rice, Golden Butterfly, ch. ix. Claret certainly good, too—none of your Gladstone tap; sherry probably rather coarse.
1885. A. Birrell, Obiter Dicta, p. 86. To make him unbosom himself over a bottle of Gladstone claret in a tavern in Leicester Square.
2. (colloquial).—A travelling bag. [So named in honour of Mr. Gladstone.]
Gladstonize, verb. (colloquial).—To talk about and round; to evade or prevaricate; to speak much and mean nothing.
Glanthorne, subs. (old).—Money. For synonyms, see Actual and Gilt.
1789. Parker, Life’s Painter, p. 42. Drop the glanthorne = part with money. [152]
Glasgow Greys, subs. phr. (military).—The 70th Foot. [Which in the beginning was largely recruited in Glasgow.]
1886. Tinsley’s Mag., Apr., p. 321. The 70th were long known as the Glasgow Greys.
Glasgow Magistrate, subs. phr. (common).—A herring, fresh or salted, of the finest. [From the practice of sending samples to the Baillie of the River for approval.] Also Glasgow Baillie.
1855. Strang, Glasgow and its City Clubs. This club … better known by the title of the Tinkler’s club, particularly when the brotherhood changed the hour of meeting … and when the steak was exchanged for a ‘Welsh rabbit’ or Glasgow magistrate.
English Synonyms. (for herrings generally).—Atlantic ranger; Californian; Cornish duck; Digby chicken; Dunbar wether; gendarme; Gourock ham; magistrate; pheasant (or Billingsgate pheasant); reds; sea-rover; soldier; Taunton turkey; two-eye’d steak; Yarmouth capon. Fr.: gendarme.
Glass, subs. (American thieves’).—An hour. [An abbreviation of ‘hour-glass.’]
1859. Matsell, Vocabulum, s.v. The badger piped his Moll about a glass and a half before she cribbed the flat.
There’s a deal of glass about, phr. (common).—1. Applied to vulgar display = ‘It’s the thing’ (q.v.).
2. (common).—Said in answer to an achievement in assertion. A memory of the proverb, ‘People who live in glass houses should not throw stones.’
Who’s to pay for the broken glass? verb. phr. (colloquial).—See Stand the Racket.
Been looking through a glass, adv. phr. (common).—Drunk. For synonyms, see Drinks and Screwed.
Glass-eyes, subs. (old).—A man wearing spectacles; four-eyes (q.v.); gig-lamps (q.v.).
1811. Lexicon Balatronicum, s.v.
Glass-house. To live in a glass house, verb. phr. (colloquial).—To lay oneself open to attack or adverse criticism.
Glass-work, subs. (card-sharpers’).—An obsolete method of cheating at cards. A convex mirror the size of a small coin was fastened with shellac to the lower corner of the left palm opposite the thumb, enabling the dealer to ascertain by reflection the value of the cards he dealt.
Glaze, subs. (old),—A window.
1690. B. E., Dict. of the Cant. Crew, s.v.
1714. Memoirs of John Hall (4th ed.), p. 12. Glaze, a Window.
1754. Discoveries of John Poulter, p. 43. Undub the Jeger and jump the glaze.
1857. Snowden, Mag. Assistant (3rd ed.), p. 445. A window, glaze.
c. 1830. Finish to Tom and Jerry [1872], p. 82. A random shot milling the glaze.
Verb (old).—To cheat at cards. See quot. and Glass-work.
1821. P. Egan, Real Life, I., 297. If you take the broads in hand in their company, you are sure to be work’d, either by glazing, that is, putting you in front of a looking glass, by which means your hand is discovered by your antagonist, or by private signals from the pal. [153]
To mill (or star a glaze), verb. phr. (old).—To break a window.
1823. Moncrieff, Tom and Jerry, iii., 2. Jerry. What are you about, Tom? Tom. I’m going to mill the glaze—I’ll——(Is about to break the glass, when Kate and Sue appear as the Miss Trifles.).
1823. Jon Bee, Dict. of the Turf. Glaze, s.v., to mill the glaze, the miller may adopt a stick or otherwise, as seems most convenient.
On the glaze, adv. phr. (thieves’).—Robbing jewellers’ shops by smashing the windows. See Glazier.
1724–34. C. Johnson, Highwaymen and Pyrates, q.v.
1889. Ally Sloper, 4 May. Getting a reprieve he went to Dublin on the glaze.
Glazier, subs., in. pl. (old).—1. The eyes. For synonyms, see Glims. Fr.: les ardents.
1567. Harman, Caveat (1814), p. 64. Glasyers, eyes.
1610. Rowlands, Martin Mark-all, p. 38 (H. Club’s Rept., 1874). Glasiers, eyes.
1611. Middleton and Dekker, Roaring Girl, v., 1. These glasiers of mine, mine eyes.
1656. Brome, Jovial Crew, ii. You’re out with your glaziers.
1690. B. E., Dict. of the Cant. Crew, s.v. The cove has rum glaziers, c. that Rogue has excellent Eyes, or an Eye like a Cat.
1724. E. Coles, Eng. Dict. Glaziers, c. eyes.
1725. New Canting Dict. ‘Song.’ Her glaziers, too, are quite benighted.
1785. Grose, Vulg. Tongue s.v.
2. (old).—A window thief. Cf., Glaze.
1725. New Cant. Dict. Song ‘The Twenty Craftsmen.’… A glazier who when he creeps in, To pinch all the lurry he thinks it no sin.
1785. Grose, Vulg. Tongue, s.v.
Gleaner, subs. (old).—A thief. Cf., Hooker, Angler, etc. For synonyms, see Thieves.
Glib, subs. (common).—1. The tongue. Slacken your glib = loose your tongue. For synonyms, see Clack.
2. (old).—A ribbon.
1754. Discoveries of John Poulter, p. 42. A lobb full of glibbs, a box full of ribbons.
Adj. (old, now recognised).—Smooth; slippery; voluble; glib-tongued or glib-gabbit (cf., Gab) = talkative; ready of speech.
1605. Shakspeare, Lear, Act i., Sc. 1. I want that glib and oily art, To speak and purpose not.
1659. Torriano, Vocabolario, s.v.
1690. B. E., Dict. of the Cant. Crew, s.v. Smooth, without a Rub. Glib-tongued. Voluble or Nimble-tongued.
1890. Licensed Vict. Gaz., 31 Jan. The rest who were so glib with their promises.
Glibe, subs. (American thieves’).—Writing; specifically, a written statement.
Glim (or Glym), subs. (old).—1. A candle, or dark lanthorn; a fire or light of any kind. To douse the glim = to put out the light. Fr.: estourbir la cabande. Also short for Glimmer or Glymmar (q.v.).
1690. B. E., Dict. of the Cant. Crew, s.v. A Dark Lanthorn used in Robbing Houses; also to burn in the Hand.
1714. Memoirs of John Hall (4th ed.), p. 12. Glim, a Candle.
1728. Bailey, Eng. Dict. Glim, s.v. A candle or light.
1785. Grose, Vulg. Tongue. Bring bess and glym; i.e., bring the instrument to force the door, and the dark lanthorn.
1823. Moncrieff, Tom and Jerry, ii., 2. Tom. Then catch—here’s the gentlemen’s tooth-picker, and here’s his glim. (Throws stick and lanthorn to Jerry.) [154]
1834. Ainsworth, Rookwood, bk. III., ch. 5. Every star its glim at hiding.
1837. Dickens, Oliver Twist, ch. 16. Let’s have a glim … or we shall go breaking our necks.
1837. Lytton, Ernest Maltravers, Bk. I., ch. 10. ‘Hush, Jack!’ whispered one; ‘hang out the glim and let’s look about us.’
1852. Judson, Myst., etc., of New York, ch. iv. Old Jack bade Harriet trim the glim.
1883. R. L. Stevenson, Treasure Island, p. 89. Sure enough, they left their glim here.
1884. Henley and Stevenson, Admiral Guinea, ii., 6. Now here is my little glim; it aint for me because I’m blind.
2. (old).—A sham account of a fire as sold by flying stationers (q.v.).
1851–61. Mayhew, Lond. Lab. and Lond. Poor, i., 233. His papers certify any and every ‘ill that flesh is heir to’.… Loss by fire is a glim.
3. in. pl. (common).—The eyes.
English Synonyms.—Blinkers; daylights; deadlights; glaziers; lights; lamps; ogles; optics; orbs; peepers; sees; squinters; toplights; windows; winkers.
French Synonyms.—Les quinquets (popular = bright eyes, Vidocq); les mirettes (popular and thieves’; Italian: mira = sight); les reluits (thieves’: also daymans—or lightmans [q.v.]); les calots (thieves’ = marbles); les châsses or les châssis (popular = hunters’); les lampions (thieves’ = lamps (q.v.); Italian: lanterna and lampante); les apics (thieves’); les ardents (thieves’ = piercers); les œillets (popular = eyelets); les lanternes de cabriolet (popular = giglamps); les clignots (popular = winkers); les carreaux (thieves’ = windows); les clairs (thieves’ = shiners); les coquards (thieves’).
Italian Synonyms.—Lanterna (= a lamp); calchi; balchi; brunotti (= brownies); lampante.
Spanish Synonyms.—Fanal (= lantern); lanterna (= idem); visantes (vulgar); vistosos (vulgar).
German Synonyms.—Dierling (from stieren = to stare); Linzer; Scheinling (from Schein = daylights (q.v.)).
1824. P. Egan, Boxiana, iv., 417. His glims I’ve made look like a couple of rainbows.
1830. Lytton, Paul Clifford, p. 47 [ed. 1854]. Queer my glims, if that ben’t little Paul!
1837. Barham, Ingoldsby Legends, II., 339. Harold escaped with the loss of a glim.
1892. Milliken, ’Arry Ballads, p. 56. A pooty gal, gentle, or simple, as carn’t use her glims is a flat.
4. in. pl. (common).—A pair of spectacles. For synonyms, see Barnacles.
5. (common).—Gonorrhœa or clap (q.v.). [From sense 1 = fire.]
Verb (old).—To brand or burn in the hand.
1690. B. E., Dict. of the Cant. Crew, s.v. As the cull was Glimm’d, he gangs to the Nubb, c., if the Fellow has been Burnt in the Hand, he’ll be Hang’d now.
1714. Memoirs of John Hall, p. 15. Profligate women are glimm’d for that villany, for which, rather than leave it, they could freely die martyrs.
1785. Grose, Vulg. Tongue, s.v.
To puff the glims, verb. phr. (veterinary).—To fill the hollow over the eyes of old [155]horses by pricking the skin and blowing air into the loose tissues underneath, thus giving the full effect of youth.
Glim-fenders, subs. (old).—1. Andirons, or fire-dogs.
1690. B. E., Dict. of the Cant. Crew, s.v. Glimfenders, c. Andirons. Rum Glimfenders, Silver Andirons.
1728. Bailey, Eng. Dict. s.v.
1785. Grose, Vulg. Tongue, s.v.
2. (old).—Handcuffs. [A pun on sense 1.]
1823. Jon Bee, Dict. of the Turf, s.v.
1848. Duncombe, Sinks of London, s.v.
Glimflashly (or Glim-flashey), adj. (old).—Angry. See Nab the Rust and Hair.
1690. B. E., Dict. of the Cant. Crew, s.v. Glimflashly, c., Angry, or in a Passion. The Cull is Glimflashly, c. the Fellow is in a Heat.
1785. Grose, Vulg. Tongue, s.v.
1830. Lytton, Paul Clifford, ch. xxxi. No, Captain, don’t be glim-flashey! You have not heard all yet.
Glim-jack, subs. (old).—A link boy; a moon-curser (q.v.); but, in any sense, a thief.
1690. B. E., Dict. of the Cant. Crew, s.v.
1785. Grose, Vulg. Tongue, s.v.
Glim-lurk, subs. (tramps’).—A beggars’ petition, based on a fictitious fire or glim (sense 2).
1851–61. H. Mayhew, Lond. Lab. and Lond. Poor, vol. I., p. 233. The patterer becomes a ‘lurker,’—that is, an imposter; his papers certify any and every ‘ill that flesh is heir to.’ Shipwreck is called a shake-lurk; loss by fire is a glim.
Glimmer (or Glymmar), subs. (old).—Fire. See quot.
1567. Harman, Caveat. These Demaunders for Glymmar be for the moste parte wemen.
1610. Rowlands, Martin Mark-all, p. 38. (H. Club’s Rept., 1874). Glymmer, Fire.
1671. R. Head, English Rogue, pt. I., ch. v., p. 49 (1874). Glymmer, Fire.
1724. E. Coles, Eng. Dict., s.v.
1725. New Canting Dict., Song, ‘The Maunder’s Praise of his Strowling Mort.’ Doxy, Oh! thy Glaziers shine, As Glymmar by the Solomon.
1785. Grose, Vulg. Tongue, s.v.
Glimmerer, subs. (old).—A beggar working with a petition giving out that he is ruined by fire. Also glimmering mort = a female glimmerer.
1690. B. E., Dict. of the Cant. Crew, s.v. Glimmerer, c., the Twenty-second Rank of the Canting Tribe, begging with Sham Licences, pretending to Losses by Fire, etc.
1785. Grose, Vulg. Tongue, s.v.
Glimstick, subs. (old).—A candlestick. [From glim = a light + stick.] Fr.: une occasion.
1690. B. E., Dict. of the Cant. Crew, s.v. Glimstick, c., a Candlestick. Rum Glimsticks, c., Silver Candlesticks. Queer Glimsticks, c., Brass, Pewter, or Iron Candlesticks.
1785. Grose, Vulg. Tongue, s.v.
Glister, subs. phr. (thieves’).—See quot., glister of fish-hooks.
1889. Clarkson and Richardson, Police, p. 321. A glass of Irish whiskey … a glister of fish-hooks.
Glistner, subs. (old).—A sovereign. For synonyms, see Canary. [156]
Gloak (or Gloach), subs. (old).—A man. For synonyms, see Chum and Cove.
1821. D. Haggart, Life, Glossary, pp. 48 and 172. Gloach, a man; cove.
Globe, subs. (old).—1. A pewter pot; pewter.
1714. Memoirs of John Hall, s.v.
1811. Lexicon Balatronicum, s.v.
2. in. pl. (common).—The paps. For synonyms, see Dairy.
Globe-rangers, subs. (nautical).—The Royal Marines.
Globe-trotter, subs. (colloquial).—A traveller; primarily one who races from place to place, with the object of covering ground or making a record. Fr.: un pacquelineur.
1886. Graphic, 7 Aug., 147/1. Your mere idle gaping globetrotter will spin endless pages of unobservant twaddle, and will record his tedious wanderings with most painful minuteness.
1888. Academy, 17 Mar. The inevitable steamboat, the world, and the omnivorous globe-trotter.
1889. Echo, 9 Feb. The British globe-trotter knows Japan as he knows England, and English books about Japan are turned out by the ton.
1890. Pall Mall Gaz., 27 Jan., p. 5, c. 2. This popular definition of a quick-mover has now become effete. Miss Bly is a globe-galloper or she is nothing.
Globe-trotting, subs. (colloquial).—Travelling after the manner of globe-trotters (q.v.).
1888. Academy, 22 Sept. In fact, globe-trotting, as the Americans somewhat irreverently term it, is now frequently undertaken as a mere holiday trip.
Glope, verb. (Winchester College).—To spit. (Obsolete).
Glorious, adj. (common).—Excited with drink; ‘in one’s altitudes’; boozed. For synonyms, see drinks and screwed.
1791. Burns, Tam o’ Shanter. Kings may be blessed, but Tam was glorious, O’er a’ the ills of life victorious.
1853. Thackeray, Barry Lyndon, ch. xviii., p. 252. I knew nothing of the vow, or indeed of the tipsy frolic which was the occasion of it; I was taken up glorious, as the phrase is, by my servants, and put to bed.
1891. Licensed Vict. Gaz., 9 Feb. But as they all began to get glorious, personalities became more frequent and very much stronger.
Glorious Sinner, subs. phr. (rhyming).—A dinner.
Glory, subs. (common).—The after life; kingdom come (q.v.). Usually, the coming glory.
1841. Punch, 17 July, p. 2. Clara pines in secret—Hops the twig, and goes to glory in white muslin.
In one’s glory, adv. phr. (colloquial).—In the full flush of vanity, pride, taste, notion, or idiosyncracy.
Gloves, to go for the gloves, verb. phr. (racing).—To bet recklessly; to bet against a horse without having the wherewithal to pay if one loses—the last resource of the plunging turfite. The term is derived from the well-known habit of ladies to bet in pairs of gloves, expecting to be paid if they win, but not to be called upon to pay if they lose.
1877. Hawley Smart, Play or Pay, ch. xi. One of the boldest plungers of the day, who had begun badly, was going for the gloves upon this match. [157]
1886. Badminton Library, ‘Racing,’ p. 255. Hardly worth mentioning are the backers who come in for a hit-or-miss dash at the ring—to go for the gloves, as it is called in ring parlance.
1891. Licensed Vict. Gaz., 3 Apr. Although we frequently read in stories of the hero backing the right horse at a long price, and so getting out of sundry monetary difficulties, we rarely find the idea realised in practice. Many a bookmaker has gone for the gloves.
Glow, adj. (tailors’).—Ashamed.
Glue, subs. (common).—1. Thick soup. (Because it sticks to the ribs.)
English Synonyms.—Deferred stock; belly-gum; giblets-twist; gut-concrete; rib-tickler; stick-in-the-ribs.
French Synonyms.—La menêtre (thieves’); la lavasse (= a mess of pot liquor); la laffe (thieves’); la jaffe (popular); l’ordinaire (popular: soup and boiled beef at an ordinary); le fond d’estomac (= thick soup); la mousse; la mouillante (= the moistener).
German Synonyms.—Jauche; Polifke.
2. (common).—Gonorrhœa.
Glue-pot, subs. (common).—A parson. [Because he joins in wedlock.] For synonyms, see Devil-dodger and Sky-pilot.
1785. Grose, Vulg. Tongue, s.v.
Glum, adj. (old: now recognised).—Sullen; down in the mouth; stern. Fr.: faire son nez = to look glum; also, n’en pas mener large.
1712. Arbuthnot, Hist. of John Bull, pt. IV., ch. vii. Nic. looked sour and glum, and would not open his mouth.
1785. Grose, Vulg. Tongue, s.v.
17(?). Broadside Ballad, ‘Sam Hall, The parson he will come, And he’ll look so bloody glum.’
1816. Johnson, Dict. of the English Language. Glum, s.v., a low cant word formed by corrupting ‘gloom.’
1847. Thackeray, Vanity Fair, ii., ch. vi. ‘I wonder whether Lady Southdown will go away; she looked very glum upon Mrs. Rawdon,’ the other said.
1888. Referee, 21 Oct. Who found him looking glum and gray, And thought his accent gruff and foreign.
1892. A. W. Pinero, The Times, v., i. What are you so glum about.
Glump, verb. (provincial).—To sulk. Hence glumpy, glumping, and glumpish = sullen or stubborn.
1787. Grose, Prov. Glossary. Glumping, sullen, or sour looking. Exm.
1835. Th. Hook, Gilbert Gurney. He was glumpy enough when I called.
1860. G. Eliot, Mill on the Floss, Bk. VI., ch. iv. ‘An’ it worrets me as Mr. Tom ’ull sit by himself so glumpish, a-knittin’ his brow, an’ a lookin’ at the fire of a night.’
Glutman, subs. (old).—See quot.
1797. Police of the Metropolis, p. 64. An inferior officer of the Customs, and particularly one of that class of supernumerary tide waiters, who are employed temporarily when there is a press or hurry of business. These glutmen are generally composed of persons who are without employment, and, being also without character, recommend themselves principally from the circumstance of being able to write.
Glutton, subs. (common).—1. A horse which lasts well; a stayer (q.v.).
2. (pugilists’).—A pugilist who can take a lot of punishment (q.v.).
1819. Moore, Tom Crib, xvi. Thus Theocritus, in his Milling Match, calls Amycus a glutton, which is well known to be the classical phrase at Moulsey-Hurst for one who, like Amycus, takes a deal of punishment before he is satisfied. [158]
1891. Licensed Vict. Mirror, 30 Jan., p. 6, c. 3. He was known to be an awfully heavy hitter with both hands, a perfect glutton at taking punishment.
Gnarler, subs. (thieves’).—A watch dog. For synonyms, see Tike.
Gnasp, verb. (old).—To vex. For synonyms, see Rile.
1728. Bailey, English Dict. s.v.
Gnoff.—See Gonnof.
Gnostic, subs. (colloquial).—A knowing one; a downy cove (q.v.); a whipster (q.v.). [From the Gr., gnosis = knowledge.]
1819. Moore, Tom Crib, p. 27. Many of the words used by the Canting Beggars in Beaumont and Fletcher’s Masque are still to be heard among the gnostics of Dyot Street and Tothill Fields.
adj. (colloquial).—Knowing, artful (q.v.).
Gnostically, adv. (colloquial).—Knowingly.
1825. Scott, St. Ronan’s Well, ch. iv. He was tog’d gnostically enough.
Go, subs. (common).—1. A drink; specifically a quartern of gin. (Formerly a go-down, but Cf., quot. 1811.)
[For other combinations see abroad—all fours—aloft—aunt—baby—back on—bad—bail—baldheaded—bath—batter—bedfordshire—beggar’s bush—better—blazes—blind—board—bodkin—bulge—bungay—bury—bust—by-by—call—camp—chump—college—cracked—dead broke—devil—ding—ding-dong—dock—doss—drag—flouch—flue—gamble—glaze—glory —gloves—grain—grass—ground—hairyfordshire—hall—halves—hang—hell—high fly—high toby—hooks—hoop—jericho—jump—kitchen—man—majority—mill—murphy—pace—pieces—pile—pot—queen—raker—range—rope-walk—salt river—shallow—shop—slow—smash—snacks—snooks—spout—star-gazing—sweet violets—top—walker’s bus—west—whole animal—woodbine—woolgathering—wrong.]
English Synonyms.—Bender; caulker; coffin nail; common-sewer; cooler; crack; cry; damp; dandy; dash; dew-hank; dewdrop; dodger; drain; dram; facer; falsh; gargle; gasp; go-down; hair of the dog, etc.; Johnny; lip; liquor up; livener; lotion; lounce; modest quencher; muzzler; nail from one’s coffin; night-cap; nip or nipper; nobbler; old crow; a one, a two, or a three; out; peg; pick-me-up; pony; quencher; reviver; rince; sensation; settler; shift; shove in the mouth; slug; small cheque; smile; snifter; something damp; something short; swig; thimbleful; tiddly; top up; tot; warmer; waxer; wet; whitewash; yard.
French Synonyms.—Un bourgeron (popular = a nip of brandy); un asticot de cercueil (= a coffin-worm, a play on verre and bière); un coup d’arrosoir (popular: a touch of the watering pot); un gargarisme (popular: = a gargle [q.v.]); un galopin (= a pony [q.v.] of beer); un larme (= a tear); un mistiche (thieves’); un misérable (popular: a glass of spirits costing one sou; une demoiselle = two sous; un monsieur = four sous; un poisson = five sous); un mince de chic (popular: in contempt); une coquille de noix (popular = a thimbleful; a very small go; a drain); un jeune homme (familiar = in capacity four litres); un Kolback (popular = a small glass of brandy, or large glass of wine); une flûte (familiar); un extravagant (popular = a long drink); un fil (= a drain); un [159]distingué (popular); une douleur (popular = a comforter or pick-me-up); un ballon (popular).
Italian Synonym.—Schioppa (= a long drink: also a large beer glass).
Spanish Synonyms.—Chisguete (colloquial); enjuagadientes (also = a mouthful of water or wine for rinsing the mouth after eating); espolada (= a long drink).
Portuguese Synonym.—Quebrado (= broken: a small glass).
1690. D’Urfey, Collin’s Walk, canto 4. And many more whose quality Forbids their toping openly, Will privately, on good occasion, Take six go-downs on reputation.
1793. Grose, Vulg. Tongue, s.v. Go-shop.… The Queen’s Head in Duke’s Court.
1811. Lexicon Balatronicum. Go-shop, s.v. The Queen’s Head, in Duke’s Court, Bow Street, Covent Garden, frequented by the under players, where gin and water was sold in three-halfpenny bowls, called goes; the gin was called Arrack.
1823. Jon. Bee, Dict. of the Turf, s.v.
1835. Dickens, Sketches by Boz, The Streets: Night. Chops, kidneys, rabbits, oysters, stout, cigars, and goes innumerable, are served up amidst a noise and confusion of smoking, running, knife-clattering, and waiter-chattering, perfectly indescribable.
1841. Punch, Vol. I., p. 11, c. 1. Waiter, a go of Brett’s best alcohol.
1849. Thackeray, Hoggarty Diamond, ch. ii. Two more chairs, Mary, two more tumblers, two more hot waters, and two more goes of gin!
1850. Smedley, Frank Fairleigh, p. 54. Drinking alternate goes of gin and water with a dustman for the purpose of insinuating myself into the affections of Miss Cinderella Smut, his interesting sister.
1853. Diogenes, Vol. II., p. 271. Shall I spend it in theatres? shows? In numerous alcohol goes?
1870. Figaro, 28 May. Their musical performances are evidently inspired by goes of gin.
1883. Echo, 7 Feb., p. 4, c. 3. Witness asked him what he had been drinking. He replied, ‘Two half-goes of rum hot and a half-pint of beer.’
2. (colloquial).—An incident; an occurrence: e.g., a rum go = a strange affair, or queer start; a pretty go = a startling business; a capital go = a pleasant business.
1803. Kenney, Raising the Wind, i., 3. Ha! ha! ha! Capital go, isn’t it?
1820. Jack Randall’s Diary. Gemmen (says he), you all well know The joy there is whene’er we meet; It’s what I call the primest go, And rightly named, ’tis—quite a treat.
1835. Dickens, Sketches by Boz, p. 251. A considerable bustle and shuffling of feet was then heard upon the stage, accompanied by whispers of ‘Here’s a pretty go!—what’s to be done?’
1837. Barham, Ingoldsby Legends. ‘Misadventures at Margate.’ ‘O, Mrs. Jones,’ says I, ‘look here! Ain’t this a pretty go!’
1841. Punch, vol. I., p. 162. Stating his conviction that this was rayther a rummy go.
1849. Thackeray, Pendennis, ch. lxxiii. Master Frank Clavering … had only time to ejaculate the words, ‘Here’s a jolly go!’ and to disappear sniggering.
1869. Mrs. H. Wood, Roland Yorke, ch. xli. ‘I am about to try what a month or two’s absence will do for me.’ ‘And leave us to old Brown?—that will be a nice go!’
1876. George Eliot, Daniel Deronda, ch. vii. A rum go as ever I saw.
1880. G. R. Sims, Three Brass Balls, pledge xvi. He … exclaimed, ‘Well, I’m dashed if this isn’t a rum go!’
1883. R. L. Stevenson, Treasure Island, p. 55. A pretty rum go if squire aint to talk for Doctor Livesey.
1891. N. Gould, Double Event, p. 305. ‘It was a near go,’ said Jack.
3. (common).—The fashion; the cheese (q.v.); the correct thing. Generally in the phrase all the go. [160]
1811. Lexicon Balatronicum, s.v. He is quite the go, he is quite varment, he is prime, he is bang up.
1821. Egan, Tom and Jerry [ed. 1891], p. 35. Tom was the go among the goes.
1835. Haliburton (‘Sam Slick’), The Clockmaker, 3 S., ch. xiv. Whatever is the go in Europe will soon be the cheese here.
1837. Barham, Ingoldsby Legends, I., 251. It was rather the go With Pilgrims and Saints in the Second Crusade.
1846. Punch, vol. X., p. 163. From lowly Queen’s quadrangle, Where muffins are the go.
1880. G. R. Sims, Ballads of Babylon (Beauty and Beast). And all day long there’s a big crowd stops To look at the lady who’s all the go.
4. (colloquial).—Life; spirit; energy; enterprise; impetus: e.g., plenty of go = full of spirit and dash. Fr.: avoir du chien.
1825. The English Spy, i., 178. She’s only fit to carry a dean or a bishop. No go in her.
1865. Macdonald, Alec Forbes of How-glen, II., 269. All night Tibbie Dyster had lain awake in her lonely cottage, listening to the quiet heavy go of the water.
1882. Daily Telegraph, 9 Oct. Mr. Grossmith’s music is bright and tripping, full of humour and go, as, under such circumstances, music should be!
1883. Illustrated London News, 10 March, p. 242, c. 3. There was any amount of dash and go in their rowing.
1887. Paton, Down the Islands. Barbadian may therefore be said to mean a man with go and grit, energy and vim.
1889. Sportsman, 19 Jan. It all lent a certain zest and go to the proceedings.
1890. Pall Mall Gaz., 21 Feb., p. 7, c. 1. There was so much heartiness and go (so to speak) in the work that it reminded me of what I had read about peasant proprietors labouring in Switzerland and elsewhere under a Home Rule Government.
5. (colloquial).—A turn; an attempt; a chance. Cf., No go.
To have a go at, verb. phr. = to make essay of anything: as a man in a fight, a shot at billiards, and (specifically) a woman.
1836. C. Dickens, Pickwick Papers (about 1827), p. 377 (ed. 1857). Wot do you think o’ that for a go?
1877. Five Years’ Penal Servitude, ch. III., p. 221. I’ve twelve this go. I did a lagging of seven, and was at the Gib. three out of it.
1878. Jas. Payn, By Proxy, ch. iii. ‘I would practise that in the seclusion of my own apartments,’ observed Pennicuick; ‘and after a few goes at it, I’ll bet a guinea I’d shake the right stick out first.’
1888. Haggard, Mr. Meeson’s Will, ch. x. You have had seven goes and I have only had six.
6. (American).—A success. To make a go of it = to bring things to a satisfactory termination.
1888. Harper’s Mag., vol. LXXVII., p. 689. Determination to make the venture a go.
7. (gaming). The last card at cribbage, or the last piece at dominoes. When a player is unable to follow the lead, he calls a go!
8. (old.)—A dandy (q.v. for synonyms); a very heavy swell indeed, one in the extreme of fashion.
1821. Egan, Tom and Jerry [people’s ed.], p. 35. In the parks, Tom was the go among the goes.
Verb (American political).—1. To vote; to be in favour of. Cf., Go for.
2. (colloquial).—To succeed; to achieve. Cf., Go down.
1866. Public Opinion, 13 Jan., p. 51, c. 1. His London-street railway scheme didn’t go. [161]
1870. H. D. Traill, ‘On the Watch.’ Sat. Songs, p. 22. Eh, waddyer say? Don’t it go? Ho, yes! my right honnerble friend. It’s go and go over the left, it’s go with a hook at the end.
3. (colloquial).—To wager; to risk. Hence to stand treat; to afford.
1768. Goldsmith, Good Natured Man, Act iii. Men that would go forty guineas on a game of cribbage.
1876. Besant and Rice, Golden Butterfly, Prologue ii. The very dice on the counter with which the bar-keeper used to go the miners for drinks.
1877. S. L. Clemens (M. Twain), Life on the Mississippi, ch. xliii., p. 390. There’s one thing in this world which a person won’t take in pine if he can go walnut; and won’t take in walnut if he can go mahogany.… That’s a coffin.
c. 1882. Comic Song, ‘The West End Boys,’ verse 3. Another bitter I really can’t go.
1887. World, 20 Apr., p. 8. While making up his mind, apparently whether he would go ‘three’ or ‘Nap.’
4. (racing).—To ride to hounds.
1884. Hawley Smart, From Post to Finish, p. 219. There would be far too many there who had seen Gerald Rockingham go with the York and Ainstey not to at once know that he and Jim Forrest were identical.
5. (colloquial).—To be pregnant.
1561–1626. Bacon, (quoted by Dr. Johnson). Women go commonly nine months, the cow and ewe about six months.
1601. Shakspeare, Henry VIII., iv., 1. Great bellied women that had not half a week to go.
Go down, verb. phr. (colloquial).—1. To be accepted, received, or swallowed; to wash (q.v.).
1609. Dekker, Lanthorne and Candle-Light, in wks. (Grosart), III., 272. For the woorst hors-flesh (so it be cheape) does best goe downe with him.
1659. Massinger, City Madam, i., 1. But now I fear it will be spent in poultry; Butcher’s-meat will not go down.
1663. Pepys, Diary, 9 Nov. The present clergy will never heartily go down with the generality of the commons of England.
1742. Fielding, Joseph Andrews, bk. II., ch. xvii. ‘O ho! you are a pretty traveller,’ cries the host, ‘and not know the Levant! … you must not talk of these things with me, you must not tip us the traveller—it won’t go here.’
1748. Smollett, Rod. Random, ch. xxi. He … shook his head, and beginning with his usual exclamation said, ‘That won’t go down with me.’
1885. W. E. Norris, Adrian Vidal, ch. vii. In fashion or out of fashion, they always pay and always go down with the public.
2. (University).—To be under discipline; to be rusticated.
1863. H. Kingsley, Austin Elliot, i., 179. How dare you say ‘deuce’ in my presence? You can go down, my Lord.
3. (common).—To become bankrupt. Also, to go under.
1892. R. L. Stevenson and L. Osbourne, The Wrecker, p. 19. Some one had certainly gone down.
To go due north, verb. phr. (obsolete).—To go bankrupt. [That is, to go to White-cross Street Prison, once situate in north London]. See Quisby.
To go on the dub, verb. phr. (old).—To go house-breaking; to pick locks. See Dub.
1690. B. E., Dict. of the Cant. Crew. Going upon the dub, c. Breaking a House with picklocks.
1785. Grose, Vulg. Tongue, s.v.
1811. Lexicon Balatronicum, s.v.
To go to the dogs, verb. phr. (colloquial).—To go to ruin. [Cf., the Dutch proverb ‘Toe goê, toe de dogs’ = money gone, credit gone too.] See Demnition bow-wows.
1857. A. Trollope, Three Clerks, ch. i. The service, he said, would go to the dogs, and might do for anything he cared and he did not mind how soon. [162]
1863. H. Kingsley, Austin Elliot, 1, 179. ‘Got a second!—bah! The University is going to the ‘——’ Deuce!’ suggested Lord Charles, who was afraid of something worse. ‘Dogs, Sir, dogs!’
c. 1879. Broadside Ballad, ‘Old Clo’.’ My line of business is played out, it’s going to the dogs.
To go off on the ear, verb. phr. (American).—To get angry; to fly into a tantrum. See Nab the rust.
To go for, verb. phr. (colloquial).—1. To attempt; to tackle; to resolve upon; to make for (q.v.).
1871. John Hay, Jim Bludso. He see’d his duty, a dead-sure thing—And he went for it thar and then.
1890. Athenæum, 22 Mar., p. 366, c. 1. The authors have spared neither their creatures nor the reader one iota; whenever an unpleasant effect was obtainable, they straightway seem to have gone for it with unflinching zest.
1891. N. Gould, Double Event, p. 221. Some men had gone for half a dozen, others for two or three, and very few for a single.
1892. Hume Nisbet, Bushranger’s Sweetheart, p. 118. We are strong, my boy, strong now, and are going in for the slugging of books also, as well as the immorality of trade.
2. (colloquial).—To attack with violence and directness, whether manually or with the tongue.