Page:Farmer - Slang and its analogues past and present - Volume 3.pdf/99

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

Fuzziness, subs. (old).—The condition of being in drink. Hence blurredness; incoherence; bewilderment.


Fuzzy, adj. (common).—1. Drunk. For synonyms, see Drinks and Screwed. Hence blurred (as a picture); tangled; incoherent or inconsequent.

1876. Hindley, Life and Adventures of a Cheap Jack, p. 324. Her husband or any other man might have drunk six glasses, with no more hurt than just making him a little fuzzy.

2. (popular).—Rough; as in a fuzzy head; a fuzzy cloth; a fuzzy bit (= a full-grown wench); a fuzzy carpet; etc.


Fuzzy-wuzzy, subs. (military). A Soudanese tribesman.

1890. Rudyard Kipling, National Observer, 8 Mar., p. 438, col. 1. So 'ere's to you Fuzzy-wuzzy And your 'ome in the Soudan, You're a pore benighted 'eathen but a first-class fighting man; And 'ere's to you Fuzzy-wuzzy with your 'ay-rick 'ead of 'air, You big, black bouncing beggar, for you bruk a British square.


Fye-buck, subs. (old).—A sixpence. For synonyms, see Bender.

1781. G. Parker, View of Society, II., 56. You give a shilling to buy a comb, for which he gives sixpence, so works you for another fye-buck.

1885. Household Words, 20 June, p. 155. 'Buck' is most likely a corruption of fye-buck, a slang name for sixpence, which is now almost, if not altogether, obsolete.


Fylche.—See Filch.


Fyst.—See Foist.