Page:Farmer - Slang and its analogues past and present - Volume 6.pdf/183

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

Shirt. To get one's shirt out (or lose one's shirt), verb. phr. (common).—To make (or get) angry. Hence, shirty = angry, ill-tempered.

1851-61. Mayhew, London Lab., iii. 147. They knocked his back as they went over, and he got shirtey.

1897. Maugham, Liza of Lambeth, iii. You ain't shirty 'cause I kissed yer?

Colloquialisms.—To bet one's shirt (or put one's shirt on) = to risk all; to fly round and tear one's shirt = to bestir oneself; shirt (or flag) in the wind = a fragment seen through the fly, or through a hole in the breech; 'that's up your shirt' = 'That's a puzzler for you'; 'Do as my shirt does' = 'Kiss my arse!'

c.1707. Ballad of Old Proverbs [Durfey, Pills, &c. (1707)], ii. 112. But if she prove her self a Flurt, Then she may do as does my shirt.

See also Boiled shirt; Bloody shirt; Historical (or Illustrated) shirt.


Shirt-sleevie, subs. phr. (Stonyhurst).—A dance: on winter Saturday evenings, and sometimes in the open air at the end of summer term. [The costume is an open flannel shirt and flannel trousers.]


Shise. See Shice.


Shit (or Shite), subs. (vulgar).—Excrement: as verb. = to ease the bowels. Whence, shit = violent abuse: generic. Thus shitsack = (1) 'a dastardly fellow,' and (2) a Nonconformist (Grose): also shit-sticks, shit-rag, shit-fellow, &c.; shitten = worthless, contemptible; shiddle-cum-shite (shittle-cum-shaw or shittletidee) = nouns or exclamations of contempt; shit-*fire = a bully; shitters = the diarrhœa; shit-bag = the belly: in pl. = the guts; shit-house = a privy; shit-pot = a rotten or worthless humbug; shit-hunter (or stir-shit) = a sod; shit-shark = a gold-finder; shit-shoe (or shit-shod) = derisive to one who has bedaubed his boot; shit-hole = the rectum; and to shit through the teeth = to vomit. Also proverbs and proverbial sayings: 'Shitten-cum-shite's the beginning of love' (proverbial); 'Wish in one hand and shit in the other, and see which will first fill'; 'Only a little clean shit (Scotticé, 'clean dirt')': derisive to one bedaubed or bewrayed; 'He (she, or it) looks as though the Devil had shit 'em flying': of things and persons mean, dwarfed, eccentric, or ridiculous; 'Like shit (sticking) to a shovel': very adhesive indeed; 'To swallow a sovereign and shit it in silver' = the height of convenience; 'Shit in your teeth' (old) = a foul retort on somebody who does not agree with you; 'It shines like a shitten barn-door' (Grose); 'All is not butter the cow sh—ts'; 'Claw a churl by the breech (or culls—Jonson) and he'll sh— in your fist'; 'The devil sh—s upon a great heap'; 'Shitten luck's good luck'; 'Lincolnshire, where hogs sh— soap, and crows sh— fire'; 'Go and eat coke and shit cinders' (popular) = derisive and defiant; 'Thought lay abed and shit himself, and thought he hadn't done it.'