Page:Farmer - Slang and its analogues past and present - Volume 2.pdf/181

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1822. Scott, Fortunes of Nigel, ch. xxiii. Marry, thou hast me on the hip there, thou old miserly cony-catcher!


Cony-Catching, verbal subs. (old).—Cheating; trickery; swindling after the manner of cony-catchers (q.v.). Shakspeare, says Nares, has once used it to express harmless roguery, playing jocular tricks, and no more [see quot., 1593]. For synonyms, see Sell.

1592. Greene, Groundwork of Conny-Catching, p. 2. . . . this booke, wherein thou shalt find the ground-worke of Conny-catching.

1593. Shakspeare, Taming of the Shrew, iv., 1. Come, you are so full of conycatching.

1608. Middleton, Trick to Catch the Old One, III., iv. Thou hast more cony-catching devices than all London.

1703. Ward, London Spy, pt. XI., p. 260. And being almost Drunk, their Brains ran on coney-catching.

1884. Daily News, Jan. 5, p. 5, col. 2. Coney-catching, or its modern equivalent, the confidence trick.

Ppl. adj. (old).—Mutatis mutandis, the same as the substantive (q.v.).

1596. Shakspeare, Merry Wives of Windsor, i., 1. Marry, sir, I have matter in my head against you; and against your Coney-catching rascals, Bardolph Nym, and Pistol.

1596. Ben Jonson, Every Man in His Humour, iii., 1. Whoreson coney-catching rascal! I could eat the very hilts for anger.


Coo-e-e-e, or Coo-ey, subs. (Australian).—A signal cry of the Australian blackfellow, adopted by the invading whites. The final 'e' is a very high note, a sort of prolonged screech, that resounds for miles through the bush, and thus enables parties that have lost each other to ascertain their relative positions.

1883. Graphic, July 7, p. 6, col. 3. Coo-e-e is the Australian cry for help. When the two hands are used, and the coo properly pitched, it can be heard a wonderful distance. Whenever a coo-e-e is heard in the bush it is a matter of conscience to answer it and see what is amiss.

1887. G. L. Apperson, in All the Year Round, 30 July, p. 67, col. 1. A common mode of expression is to be 'within cooey' of a place. Originally, no doubt, this meant to be within the distance at which the well-known cooey or bush cry, could be heard; now it simply means within easy reach of a place. To be 'within cooey' of Sydney is to be at the distance of an easy journey therefrom.

1889. E. S. Rawson, In Australian Wilds. 'A Queensland Mystery.' It is solely on this, or the mad theory, that one could account for the startling effects of Jim's cooee or otherwise to the belated wanderer it would have been a revelation of joy and rescue.


Cook, verb (colloquial).—1. To tamper with, garble, or falsify. Accounts are cooked when so altered as to look better than they are. Pictures are cooked when dodged-up for sale. Painters say that a picture will not cook when it is so excellent as to be beyond imitation.

1751. Smollett, Peregrine Pickle, ch. xcviii. Some falsified printed accounts, artfully cooked up, on purpose to mislead and deceive.

1856. Punch, vol. XXXI., p. 189. 'Advertisement of Bubble Bank Book-keeping,' by Prof. McDooall. It is remarkable especially for the facilities it offers for cooking the accounts, as it entirely prevents any possibility of checking them.

1863. C. Reade, Hard Cash, II., p. 19. When A has been looking up to B for thirty years, he cannot look down on him all of a sudden, just because he catches him falsifying accounts. Why, man is a cooking animal; commercial man especially.

1871. The Athenæum, 4 Feb. The great work of art of Ivan Turgeneff, the Notes by a Sportsman had been what is vulgarly called cooked for the French markets.