Page:Farmer - Slang and its analogues past and present - Volume 2.pdf/102

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1869. S. L. Clemens ('Mark Twain'), Innocents at Home, p. 22. Pard, he was a great loss to this town. It would please the boys if you could chip in something like that, and do him justice.

1888. American Magazine, Sept. A man who won't chip in to charity is always an object of suspicion.

1888. Star, 12 Dec., p. 3, col. 3. Justice Smith here chipped in with the remark that counsel . . . had not curtailed their cross-examination.

Not to care a chip.—See Care and Fig.

Brother chip, subs. phr. (common).—'Brother smut'; one of the same trade or profession. Cf., Chip of the old block.

1862. Penny Newsman. 'Mr. Bernal Osborne on Pigs and Politics.' I must say I never saw a set of gentlemen, who were in such excellent condition without verging upon obesity (considerable laughter). I could have wished, gentlemen, that there had been a larger show to-day. At the same time as a brother chip (a laugh)—Oh, gentlemen, I am a farmer (hear). I am one of those farmers that don't understand my business as well as I ought.

Chip of the same, or the same old, block, sometimes abbreviated to chip, phr. (common). A person reproducing certain familiar or striking characteristics. Chip = also a man or thing, and in this sense is equivalent to Bloke, Cove, Cheat, etc., all of which see.

c. 1626. Dick of Devonshire, in Bullen's Old Plays, ii., 60. Your father used to come home to my mother, and why may not I be a chipp of the same blocke, out of which you two were cutt?

1762. Colman, Musical Lady, II., iii. You'll find him his father's own son, I believe; a chip of the old block, I promise you!

1843. Dickens, Martin Chuzzlewit, ch. xviii., p. 189. 'Yes, yes, Chuffey, Jonas is a chip of the old block. It's a very old block now, Chuffey,' said the old man.

1860. Funny Fellow, May 7, p. 1. Hollo, my kiddy, stir your stumps, And chuck yourself about; Make haste, young chip, my boots to shine, Or your shine I'll quick take out.

1865. M. E. Braddon, Henry Dunbar, ch. xxxviii. I was in love myself once, though I do seem such a dry old chip.

Chip in porridge, broth, etc., phr. (common).—An old phrase signifying a thing of no moment; a nonentity.

1686. Goad, Celest. Bodies, I., xvii., 108. The Sextile is no chip in broth . . . but a very considerable Engine. [m.]

1688. Vox Cleri Pro Rege, 56. A sort of chip in pottage, which (he hopes) will not do Popery much good, nor the Church of England much harm. [m.]

1849. Sir Chas. Napier, as quoted in N. and Q., 1 S., i., p. 383. 'The reviews which the Commander-in-Chief makes of the troops are not to be taken as so many chips in porridge.'

1880. Church Times, 25 June. The Burials Bill . . . is thought . . . to resemble the proverbial chip in porridge, which does neither good nor harm. [m.]


Chipper, adj. (American).—'Fit'; active; ready to 'chip in.'


Chippy, adj. (common).—Unwell; seedy. Generally used to describe the results of over-indulgence in eating, drinking, etc. Cf., Cheap.

1877. Belgravia, April, p. 235. After two copious libations of the above [B. and S.], a man is apt to feel chippy next morning.

1884. Hawley Smart, From Post to Finish [Ry. ed.], p. 157. A dozen cigars a day make one feel dreadfully chippy in the morning.


Chips, subs. (old).—1. A carpenter. Fourbesque equivalents are gangherino and zangarino, whilst the Gaunersprache has Mepaie,

1785. Grose, Dict. Vulg. Tongue. A nick-name for a carpenter.