This platform is one of the many innovations on board. MANTEL-PIECE.The owners very much wanted inside/outside easy and versatile living with clutter-free decks and a swim platform or beach for the tender and divers. " Where's your manners?" meaning, Why don't you ac. Often said byĪ mother to a child when anything is given to it. Fre-Ī mankind witch ! Hence with her, out o'doors.Ī plaguy mankind girl how my brain totters. Mash-vat, to prevent the grains passing through the tap. Made of herself." Shalcspere uses malkin for a dirty Palsgrave gives, " Malkyn for an ouyn,įrovgen." This name is not so general as DAFFLER,ģ. In fields and gardens, to frighten away birds. Patches, personating a man, and set up as a scarecrow A stuffed saddle, with a ridge beforeĪnd behind, for carrying luggage or merchandize. Thrown in, to complete the pound, is called a make-weight. Making up to a certain lady he's endeavouring to play To approach to pay the precursoryĪttentions to a female, when intending matrimonial pro. " She made as moche of me as if I had ben her sonne."īe comfortable to my mother, your mistress, and make much Palsgrave has, " I make moche of, I cherysshe hym." Your father has committed you to my charge, Nothing aptly exemplified by Beaumont and Fletcher. To use, to turn to account : mostįrequently used in a bad sense, but not necessarily so.Īlso to waste to destroy. " He gave me a present, but I shall make it To recompense, to repay, to give anĮquivalent. Make ''count o' seeing all my children at the feast." I shall make bold now to make up to those flirting gentlemen. " If I may mak so bold as to ax a favor," is aĬommon prelude when an inferior is soliciting anything " I'm soĭistressed, I've bin obliged to make away wf e'ery thing " her man," and a man speaking of his wife would say, Scend a grade lower, a woman would call her husband Nunciation of Master, though apparently vulgar, is onlyĪ continuation of the Anglo-Saxon, mossier. A wife's inquiryįor her husband usually is, " Where's the maister?" andĪ servant would reply, " Maisters a-field." This pro. Very commonĪmong the agricultural population. Might and main" is to do it with all your strength. Another name for a LACE-HORSE, which see. (Linn.) The common flesh-fly, so called from its de. Was going to the jubilee upon all occasions. Some time ago he had got the travelling magget in his head, and If this magget bite a little deeper, we shall have you a citizen Sanctions the usage of this (as Todd terms it) " low Maggot bites?" is an expression in common use. Maggot have you got in your head now?" or, " What Telligibly perplexed, confused as often evinced in the " Stammer," from Suetonius.įaffle appears to be a word of like meaning in the North.ī.N.C. Which so stammered or mafled in his talke, that he was notīARET'S Alvearie, in v. Palseie, in such staggering and mafling wise, &c. Yet, notwithstanding, he delivered his speeches, by reason of his " To maffle or faulter to speak or pronounce imper-įectly." The Encyclopedia Metropolitana furnishes the Wordes," gives, " Seilinguare, to stutter, to maffle orįaulter in speech " and Cotgrave, under Bredouiller, has, There is good authority for thisĪpparently vulgar word. ' The same name is sometimes appropriated Make the doors upon a woman's wit, and it will out at the "Have you made theĭoors?" Also used in the present tense, "Make the Well ! which of you two will be my daughter-in-law now ?īisarre, Bisarre, what say you, Mad-cap ? Hot-brained fellow," and Shakspere and Beaumont and So restricted though Todd defines it " a madman, a wild, Madam, if you do so " or, " I'll give it you, madam, if It is sometimes used as a word of reproach, A designation formerly given by courtesy toĮlderly untitled ladies of the aristocracy now growing Give, " Mackled, blotted, or daubed in printing." Lat. This word applied it to marble-paper, which he said was Small thin white streaky clouds, foreboding wind and from various authors: to which are added, the customs of the county"ĪBEL & SONS, AND MARK DORMAN, NORTHAMPTON. Full text of " Glossary of Northamptonshire words and phrases with examples of their colloquial use, and illus.
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