Page:Farmer - Slang and its analogues past and present - Volume 3.pdf/214

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river' (Shakspeare); to go face-making; to go to Durham (North Country); to go to see a sick friend; to have it; to join faces (Durfey); to join giblets; to make ends meet; to make the beast with two backs (Shakspeare and Urquhart); to make a settlement in tail; to play top-*sawyer; to put it in and break it; to post a letter; to go on the stitch; to labor lea (Scots); to tether one's nags on (idem); to nail twa wames thegither (idem); to lift a leg on (Burns); to ride a post (Cotton); to peel one's end in; to put the devil into hell (Boccaccio); to rub bacons (Urquhart); to strop one's beak; to strip one's tarse in; to grind one's tool; to grease the wheel; to take on a split-arsed mechanic; to take a turn in Bushey-park, Cock-alley, Cock-lane, Cupid's-alley, Cupid's-corner, Hair-court, 'the lists of love' (Shakspeare), Love-lane, on Mount Pleasant, among the parsley, on Shooter's-hill, through the stubble; to whack it up; to wollop it in; to labour leather; to wind up the clock (Sterne).

Of women only.—To get an arselins coup (Burns); to catch an oyster; to do the naughty; to do a spread, a tumble, a back-*fall, what mother did before me; a turn on one's back, what Eve did with Adam; to hold, or turn up one's tail (Burns and Durfey); to get one's leg lifted, one's kettle mended, one's chimney swept out, one's leather stretched; to lift one's leg; to open up to; to get shot in the tail; to get a shove in one's blind eye; to get a wet bottom; what Harry gave Doll (Durfey); to suck the sugar-stick; to take in beef; to take Nebuchadnezzar out to grass; to look at the ceiling over a man's shoulder; to get outside it; to play one's ace; to rub one's arse on (Rochester); to spread to; to take in and do for; to give standing room for one; to get hulled between wind and water; to get a pair of balls against one's butt; to take in cream; to show (or give) a bit; to skin the live rabbit; to feed (or trot out) one's pussy (q.v.); to lose the match and pocket the stakes; to get a bellyful of marrow pudding; to supple both ends of it (Scots); to draw a cork; to get hilt and hair (Burns); to draw a man's fireworks; to wag one's tail (Pope); to take the starch out of; to go star-gazing (or studying astronomy) on one's back; to get a green gown (Herrick and Durfey); to have a hot pudding (or live sausage) for supper; to grant the favour; to give mutton for beef, juice for jelly, soft for hard, a bit of snug for a bit of stiff, a hole to hide it in, a cure for the horn (q.v.), a hot poultice for the Irish toothache; to pull up one's petticoats to; to get the best and plenty of it; to lie under; to stand the push; to get stabbed in the thigh; to take off one's stays; to get touched up, a bit of the goose's-neck, a go at the creamstick, a handle for the broom.

Conventionalisms.—To have connection; to have carnal, improper, or sexual intercourse; to know carnally; to have carnal knowledge of; to indulge in sexual commerce; to go to bed with; to lie with; to go in unto (Biblical); to be intimate.