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1811 Dictionary in the Vulgar Tongue, by Francis Grose is part of HackerNoon’s Book Blog Post series. You can jump to any chapter in this book here: [LINK TO TABLE OF LINK]. Section X,Y AND Z
Section X,Y AND Z
XANTIPPE. The name of Socrates's wife: now used to signify a shrew or scolding wife.YAFFLING. Eating. CANT.TO YAM. To eat or stuff heartily.YANKEY, or YANKEY DOODLE. A booby, or country
lout: a name given to the New England men in North
America. A general appellation for an American.
YARMOUTH CAPON. A red herring: Yarmouth is a
famous place for curing herrings.
YARMOUTH COACH. A kind of low two-wheeled cart
drawn by one horse, not much unlike an Irish car.
YARMOUTH PYE. A pye made of herrings highly spiced,
which the city of Norwich is by charter bound to present
annually to the king.
ZANY. The jester, jack pudding, or merry andrew, to a
mountebank.
ZEDLAND. Great part of the west country, where the
letter Z is substituted for S; as zee for see, zun for sun,
Grose, Francis. 2004. 1881 Dictionary in the Vulgar Tongue. Urbana, Illinois: Project Gutenberg. Retrieved April 2022 from
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