Page:Farmer - Slang and its analogues past and present - Volume 4.pdf/10

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1869. Putnam's Magazine, August [quoted by De Vere]. Long sermons running on to a tenthly, with a goodly number of improvements appended.


Impure, subs. (common).—A harlot. For synonyms see Barrack-Hack and Tart.

1811. Lexicon Balatronicum, s. v.

1823. Grose, Vulg. Tongue (3rd ed., Egan) s. v.


In, subs. (colloquial).—A person in, or holding an office; specifically, (in politics) a member of the party in office. Cf. Out.

1768. Goldsmith, Good Natured Man, v. Was it for this I have been dreaded both by ins and outs? Have I been libelled in the Gazetteer, and praised in the St. James's?

1770. Chatterton, Prophecy. And doomed a victim for the sins. Of half the outs and all the ins.

1842. Dickens, American Notes, ch. ii. The ins rubbed their hands; the outs shook their heads.

1857. Lawrence, Guy Livingstone (5th Ed.) p. 216. If he had backed the in instead of the Out.

1884. Pall Mall Gazette, 20 March. p. 1, col. 2. When there shall be no distinction in principle between Radicals and Tories, but a mere scramble for office between ins and 'outs'.

1884. Pall Mall Gazette, 7 July. The pledges which the ins have to contend with in their strife with the Outs.

1888. Boston Daily Globe. It is the civil service that turns out all the ins and puts in the outs.

1890. Norton, Political Americanisms, s. v. ins and outs.

Adv. (colloquial).—Various: (cricketers') = at the wickets; (general) = in season; also, on an equality with, sharing, or intimate with, or fashionable; (political) = in office; (thieves') = in prison, or quodded (q.v.)

1851-61. H. Mayhew, London Lab. & Lon. Poor, i, p. 85. During July cherries are in as well as raspberries

1877. Five Years Penal Servitude, iii, p. 147. It is the etiquette among prisoners never to ask a man what he is in for. The badge upon his left arm gives his sentence.

1883. Punch, 28 July, p. 38, col. 1. I was in it, old man, and no kid.

1891. N. Gould, Double Event, p. 180. You are all in with me at this.

1892. Hume Nisbet, Bushranger's Sweetheart, p. 311. Jenkins has been on a visit to us for the past two months, so that we are all in it.

1894. George Moore, Esther Walters, xxx. Are the 'orses he backs what you'd call well in?

To be in (or in it) with one, verb. phr. (common).—1. To be 'even with'; to be on guard against.

2. (colloquial).—To be on intimate terms, or in partnership with; to be in the swim (q.v.) Cf., in, prep.

1845. Surtees, Hillingdon Hall, v. p. 22 (1888). He was in with the players too, and had the entrée of most of the minor theatres.

1879. Justin McCarthy, Donna Quixote, xxxii. You have gone a great deal too far to turn back now, let me tell you. You have been in with me from the very first.

1888. J. McCarthy and Mrs. Campbell Praed, The Ladies Gallery, xxii. The love of woman, the thirst for gold, the desire for drink, the ambition of high command, are not in it with the love of speech-making when once that has got its hold.

1892. Ally Sloper's Half-holiday, 27 Feb., p. 71, col. 3. Peter was fascinated all the time. Hypnotism was not in it as compared with the effect of that . . . umbrella.

To be in for it, verb. phr. (common).—1. To be in trouble; generally to be certain to receive, suffer, or do (something).

1668. Dryden, An Evening's Love, ii. I fear that I am in for a week longer than I proposed.