10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «COCKNEYDOM»
Discover the use of
cockneydom in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
cockneydom and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Anecdotes of Celebrities of London and Paris
Parisian Cockneydom. 1 35 nished it with artistic taste, and there he receives his
friends with splendid hospitality. Parisian Cockneydom. — Although I entertain a
high opinion of the Parisians and. Frenchmen generally, I believe that there is ...
2
The Coming Terror and Other Essays and Letters
It may be remarked here, in this connection, that on great public questions
involving the progress of humanity and the rights of minorities, Cockneydom is
nearly always on the wrong side, and generally the last to be converted. It was a
great ...
Robert Williams Buchanan, 1891
3
Celebrities of London and Paris Being a Third Series of ...
... friends, who speak highly of his liberality and disinterestedness. He has built a
splendid hotel near the British Embassy, and furnished it with artistic taste, and
there he receives his friends with splendid hospitality. PARISIAN COCKNEYDOM
.
4
Celebrities of London and Paris; a third series of reminiscences
... who speak highly of his liberality and disinterestedness. He has built a
splendid hotel near the British Embassy, and furnished it with artistic taste, and
there he receives his friends with splendid hospitality. Parisian Cockneydom. —
Although ...
5
The Encyclopædic Dictionary: A New, and Original Work of ...
cockneydom—. cocoa. 307 " 1 li:tvi' HO Mil UVUII Ne no ealbeney, by Criit,
coloppua for to make." Langland : p. Plowman, 4,170. * 2. An effeminate person ;
a coxcomb. " I am afraid this great lubber, the world, will prove a coc**iey."—
Shake* p ...
6
The Encyclopaedic Dictionary: A New Original Work of ...
cockneydom—. cocoa. 807. " 1 have no Milt tncon N Ne no eotency, by Crist,
coloppea for to make." Lanyland : P. Plowman, 4,370. * 2. An effeminate person ;
a coxcomb. " I Mm afraid 1 1. great lubber, the world, will prove • codotey."-Shakrti
...
7
Lloyd's Encyclopaedic Dictionary: A New and Original Work of ...
A New and Original Work of Reference to the Words in the English Language.
cockneydom—. cocoa. 307 * 2. An effeminate perso u ; a coxcomb. - 1 am afraid
this great lubber, the world. will рготв а roeknes.
8
In Darkest England and the Way Out
"What," it will be said, "do you think that you can create agricultural pioneers out
of the scum of Cockneydom ? " Let us look for a moment at the ingredients which
make up what you call " the scum of Cockneydom." After careful examination and
...
Cockneydom, by the way, is Mr. Buchanan's name for the literary atmosphere
which makes one's own city—be it London, Paris, or Boston—seem the centre of
the universe; its visible embodiment in England is the " Quarterly Review," and Mr
.
Francis Fisher Browne, 1892
As to the references to Cockneydom and its linguistic practices as furnishing a
norma loquendi, I utterly protest again the notion that any Buch can be found in
them. The " pure well " of English has been defiled by the five millions who dwell
...
4 NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «COCKNEYDOM»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term
cockneydom is used in the context of the following news items.
Will Self: London thinks only of itself. The rest of the country is just …
What's new about the current reordering of the metropolis's vital organs is that the beating heart of Cockneydom is finally being excised ... «The Independent, Apr 12»
PHOTOS: Kate Moss' Bad Side Covers W Magazine
Moss has aged and continues to age—not gracefully, for she's a suburban hellion from the outer limits of Cockneydom, but beguilingly. «Styleite, Feb 12»
Overrating Overrated Writers
He was the incarnation of cockneydom, a caricaturist who aped the moralist; he should have kept to short stories. If his novels are read at all in ... «First Things, Aug 10»
A Nasty Way With Words
... a novelist who prided himself on his prose refinement, knocked his contemporary Charles Dickens for being the "incarnation of cockneydom. «Wall Street Journal, Nov 09»