10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «JICKAJOG»
Discover the use of
jickajog in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
jickajog and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Slang and Its Analogues Past and Present: A Dictionary ...
Jibe, verb. (American).—To agree; to live in harmony ; to jump {q.v.). Jickajog. 53
ßg 1871. S.Clemens, Screamers, p. 60. The piece you happened tobe playing
was a little rough on the proprietors, so to speak—didn't seem to jibe with the ...
2
The Routledge Dictionary of Historical Slang
jickajog. A-Z 2791 . A pushing; a commotion: low: C.17–mid-19. Jonson.
Euphonic reduplication on jog. cf. JIG-JOG. jiff. (1790, ob.); gen. jiffy (1785); occ.
jeffy (–1791). A moment: coll. Rare except when preceded by in a. Grose, 3rd ed.;
H.
3
The Dramatic Works: Embellished with Portraits
... a jickajog i' the booths, you should ha' thought an earthquake had been i' the
Fair! But these master-poets, they will ha' their own absurd courses; they will be
inform'd of nothing. He has (sir reverence) kick'd me three or four times about the
...
Ben Jonson, Francis Beaumont, John Fletcher, 1811
4
A Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English
But what is kibber? unless it be a rhyme-tag? jickajog. A pushing; a commotion:
low: C.17—mid-19. (Jonson) Euphonic reduplication on jog. Cf. jig(ga)-jog(gy). jiff
(1790, 0b.); gen. jiffy (1785); occ. jeffy (—1791). A moment: coll. Rare except ...
5
The alchemist. Catiline, Bartholomew Fair
... a jickajog i' the booths, you should ha' thought an earthquake had been i' the
Fair! But these master- oets, they will ha' their own absurd courses ; they wi l be
inform'd of nothing. He has (sir reverence) kick'd me three or four times about the
...
Ben Jonson, Peter Whalley, 1756
6
A complete dictionary of the english and german languages ...
William James. т. a. (¡n ©ierfegel auf lit aubère ©eit« bet SHûfrtl bringen i ote* (
porten. Jibe, jibe, í. Gibe. [m. Jickajog, j3k'-í-jSg, я. Síuíf, JUty , jîf'-fe , »- Ííngenbliff,
m.; i» a—, m i б í 1 1 1 l i .t ...
7
Neuman and Baretti's Dictionary of the Spanish and English ...
Maraguto ó foque. Standing jib, Contra-foque. Middle-jib, Segundo roque. Jib-
boom, Botalón de toque. Jib-iron, Ar- raca. Jickajog, Jig-jog,». (Cant.) Empujón,
sacudimiento. Jíffy, ». (Joe.) Instante, momento. Jio, ». Jota, bayle y tañido alegre.
Henry Neuman, Giuseppe Marco Antonio Baretti, 1828
8
The dramatic works of Ben Jonson, and Beaumont and Fletcher: ...
... this matter, he would ha' made you inch a jickajog i' the booths, you should ha'
thought an earthquake had been i' the Fair ! But these master-poets, they will ha'
their own absurd courses ; they will be inform' d of nothing. He has (sir ...
Ben Jonson, John Fletcher, George Colman, 1811
9
Phreno-mnemotechnic Dictionary: Being a Philosophical ...
6750 — Checkless. * 675 1 — Jaculate, chocolate, shackled, joggled, ejaculate. *
6754 — Joculary, jocular, juggler, jugular. • 6762 — Ejection. » 6767 — Jickajog.
* 6769 — Jockeyship. * 6785— Chokeful. » 6790 — Jacobus, cich-pease.
Francis Fauvel-Gouraud, 1844
10
The alchemist. Catiline, his conspiracy. Bartholomew Fair
... such a jickajog i' the booths, you should ha' thought an earthquake had been i'
the Fair ! But these fnaster-poets, they will ha' their own absurd courses ; they will
be inform'd of nothing. He has (sir reverence) kick'd me three or four times ...
Ben Jonson, Peter Whalley, 1756