1811 Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue Part 37
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HASTY. Precipitate, pa.s.sionate. He is none of the Hastings sort; a saying of a slow, loitering fellow: an allusion to the Hastings pea, which is the first in season.
HASTY PUDDING. Oatmeal and milk boiled to a moderate thickness, and eaten with sugar and b.u.t.ter. Figuratively, a wet, muddy road: as, The way through Wandsworth is quite a hasty pudding. To eat hot hasty pudding for a laced hat, or some other prize, is a common feat at wakes and fairs.
HAT. Old hat; a woman's privities: because frequently felt.
HATCHES. Under the hatches; in trouble, distress, or debt.
HATCHET FACE. A long thin face.
HAVIL. A sheep. CANT.
HAVY CAVY. Wavering, doubtful, s.h.i.+lly shally.
HAWK. Ware hawk; the word to look sharp, a bye-word when a bailiff pa.s.ses. Hawk also signifies a sharper, in opposition to pigeon. See PIGEON. See WARE HAWK.
HAWKERS. Licensed itinerant retailers of different commodities, called also pedlars; likewise the sellers of news-papers.
Hawking; an effort to spit up the thick phlegm, called OYSTERS: whence it is wit upon record, to ask the person so doing whether he has a licence; a punning allusion to the Act of hawkers and pedlars.
To HAZEL GILD. To beat any one with a hazel stick.
HEAD CULLY OF THE Pa.s.s, or Pa.s.sAGE BANK. The top tilter of that gang throughout the whole army, who demands and receives contribution from all the pa.s.s banks in the camp.
HEAD RAILS. Teeth. SEA PHRASE.
HEARING CHEATS. Ears. CANT.
HEART'S EASE. Gin.
HEARTY CHOAK. He will have a hearty choak and caper sauce for breakfast; i.e. he will be hanged.
HEATHEN PHILOSOPHER. One whose breech may be seen through his pocket-hole: this saying arose from the old philosophers, many of whom depised the vanity of dress to such a point, as often to fall into the opposite extreme.
TO HEAVE. To rob. To heave a case; to rob a house.
To heave a bough; to rob a booth. CANT.
HEAVER. The breast. CANT.
HEAVERS. Thieves who make it their business to steal tradesmen's shop-books. CANT.
HECTOR. bully, a swaggering coward. To hector; to bully, probably from such persons affecting the valour of Hector, the Trojan hero.
HEDGE. To make a hedge; to secure a bet, or wager, laid on one side, by taking the odds on the other, so that, let what will happen, a certain gain is secured, or hedged in, by the person who takes this precaution; who is then said to be on velvet.
HEDGE ALEHOUSE. A small obscure alehouse.
HEDGE CREEPER. A robber of hedges.
HEDGE PRIEST. An illiterate unbeneficed curate, a patrico.
HEDGE Wh.o.r.e. An itinerant harlot, who bilks the bagnios and bawdy-houses, by disposing of her favours on the wayside, under a hedge; a low beggarly prost.i.tute.
HEELS. To he laid by the heels; to be confined, or put in prison. Out at heels; worn, or diminished: his estate or affairs are out at heels. To turn up his heels; to turn up the knave of trumps at the game of all-fours.
HEEL TAP. A peg in the heel of a shoe, taken out when it is finished. A person leaving any liquor in his gla.s.s, is frequently called upon by the toast-master to take off his heel-tap.
h.e.l.l. A taylor's repository for his stolen goods, called cabbage: see CABBAGE. Little h.e.l.l; a small dark covered pa.s.sage, leading from London-wall to Bell-alley.
h.e.l.l-BORN BABE. A lewd graceless youth, one naturally of a wicked disposition.
h.e.l.l CAT. A termagant, a vixen, a furious scolding woman.
See TERMAGANT and VIXEN.
h.e.l.l HOUND. A wicked abandoned fellow.
h.e.l.l FIRE d.i.c.k. The Cambridge driver of the Telegraph.
The favorite companion of the University fas.h.i.+onables, and the only tutor to whose precepts they attend.
HELTER SKELTER. To run helter skelter, hand over head, in defiance of order.
HEMP. Young hemp; an appellation for a graceless boy.
HEMPEN FEVER. A man who was hanged is said to have died of a hempen fever; and, in Dorsets.h.i.+re, to have been stabbed with a Bridport dagger; Bridport being a place famous for manufacturing hemp into cords.
HEMPEN WIDOW. One whose husband was hanged.
HEN-HEARTED. Cowardly.
HEN HOUSE. A house where the woman rules; called also a SHE HOUSE, and HEN FRIGATE: the latter a sea phrase, originally applied to a s.h.i.+p, the captain of which had his wife on board, supposed to command him.
HENPECKED. A husband governed by his wife, is said to be henpecked.
HEN. A woman. A c.o.c.k and hen club; a club composed of men and women.
HERE AND THEREIAN. One who has no settled place of residence.
HERRING. The devil a barrel the better herring; all equally bad.
HERRING GUTTED. Thin, as a shotten hering.
HERRING POND. The sea. To cross the herring pond at the king's expence; to be transported.
HERTFORDs.h.i.+RE KINDNESS. Drinking twice to the same person.
HICK. A country hick; an ignorant clown. CANT.
HICKENBOTHOM. Mr. Hickenbothom; a ludicrous name for an unknown person, similar to that of Mr. Thingambob.
Hickenbothom, i.e. a corruption of the German word ickenbaum, i.e. oak tree.
HICKEY. Tipsey; quasi, hickupping.
1811 Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue Part 37
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1811 Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue Part 37 summary
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