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Old English Slang

 

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Karibat . food, literally rice and curry; the staple dish of both natives and Europeans in India.—_Anglo-Indian._
Keel-hauling . a good thrashing or mauling, rough treatment,—from the old nautical custom of punishing offenders by throwing them overboard with a rope attached, and hauling them up from under the ship’s keel. See full description of this barbarous practice in Marryat’s _Snarleyyow_.
Keep a pig . an Oxford University phrase, which means to have a lodger. A man whose rooms contain two bedchambers has sometimes, when his college is full, to allow the use of one of them to a Freshman, who is called under these circumstances a PIG. The original occupier is then said to KEEP A PIG.
Keep it up . to prolong a debauch, or the occasion of a rejoicing,—a metaphor drawn from the game of shuttlecock. People suffering from the effects of drink are said to have been KEEPING IT UP.—_Grose._
Kelter . coin, money. Probably from GELT.
Ken . a house.—_Ancient cant._ KHAN, _Gipsy_ and _Oriental_.
Kennedy . a poker; to “give KENNEDY” is to strike or kill with a poker. A St. Giles’s term, so given from a man of that name being killed by a poker.
Kent rag . or CLOUT, a cotton handkerchief.
Kervorten . a Cockneyism for QUARTERN or quarter-pint measure. “KERVORTEN and three houts,” a quartern of liquor and glasses, each holding a third of the quantity.
Ketch . or JACK KETCH, the popular name for a public hangman; derived from a person of that name who officiated in the reign of Charles II.—_See Macaulay’s History of England._
Kettle of fish . a mess or muddle of any kind. As, “Here’s a pretty KETTLE OF FISH!”
Key of the street . an imaginary instrument said to be possessed by any one locked out of doors.
Kibosh . nonsense, stuff, humbug; “it’s all KIBOSH,” _i.e._, palaver or nonsense; to “put on the KIBOSH,” to run down, slander, degrade, &c. To put the KIBOSH on anything is, latterly, to put an effectual end or stop to it.
Kick . a moment; “I’ll be there in a KICK,” _i.e._, in a moment.
Kick . a pocket; _Gaelic_, CUACH, a bowl, a nest; _Scotch_, QUAIGH.
 
Old English 'word lottery' pick

Piculet : n. Any species of very small woodpeckers of the genus Picumnus and allied genera. Their tail feathers are not stiff and sharp at the tips, as in ordinary woodpeckers.

 
Based on the Slang Dictionary by John Camden Hotten, published by CHATTO & WINDUS, 1913
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