gambado

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gambado
▪ I. gambado1 (gæmˈbeɪdəʊ) Chiefly in pl. gambadoes, -ados. Also 7 gambada's, 8 gambades (?), 9 dial. gambaders. See also gambage. [f. It. gamba leg + -ado.] A kind of large boot or gaiter, attached to a saddle, to protect the rider's legs and feet from the wet or cold. In later use sometimes applie... Oxford English Dictionary
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Lovejoy (novel series)
1984) Pearlhanger (1985) The Tartan Ringers (1986), U.S. edition: The Tartan Sell (1986) Moonspender (1988) Jade Woman (1988) The Very Last Gambado wikipedia.org
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gambage
† ˈgambage Obs. = gambado1.1663 [see gambado1]. 1725 Brice's Weekly Jrnl. 5 Nov. 4 A Bay Mare..with Briddle, Sadle, and Gambages. 1730–6 Bailey (folio), Gambages, gambadoes, splatterdashes. Oxford English Dictionary
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gambada
gambada var. gambado2. Oxford English Dictionary
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John Grant (novelist)
Erin (1983) The Gondola Scam (1984) Pearlhanger (1985) The Tartan Ringers (1986) aka The Tartan Sell Moonspender (1986) Jade Woman (1988) The Very Last Gambado wikipedia.org
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gambade
gambade (gæmˈbeɪd) [A readoption (by Sir W. Scott) of F. gambade: see gambol.] 1. A leap or bound of a horse. (Cf. gambado2 1.)1823 Scott Quentin D. ix, Each fresh gambade of his unmanageable horse placed him in a new and more precarious attitude. 1834 Tait's Mag. I. 850 [He] gallops his Pegasus at ... Oxford English Dictionary
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William Paulet Carey
Nettle, aimed at the Marquess of Buckingham, and published it under the pseudonym "Scriblerus Murtough O'Pindar" He did the copperplates in Geoffrey Gambado's wikipedia.org
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Gormogon
† ˈGormogon Obs. Also gormagon. [Meaningless: pseudo Chinese.] A member of a society imitating the Freemasons, founded early in the 18th c.1725 Two Letters in Grand Mystery of Freemasons (ed. 2) 13 The Venerable Order of Gormogons having been brought into England by a Chinese Mandarin. 1729 H. Carey... Oxford English Dictionary
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turncock
ˈturncock [f. turn v. + cock n.1] † 1. A stop-cock of which the plug is turned to open or close it. Obs.1702 Savery Miner's Friend 42 At every Floor there may be a turn-cock with a Skrew. 1755 Hales in Phil. Trans. XLIX. 320 When, by means of a turn-cock, a gallon of water was two minutes in running... Oxford English Dictionary
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thereaways
ˈthereaways, adv. Now dial. [f. prec. with advb. genitive -s: cf. aways.] = prec.1575 Gamm. Gurton iv. ii, He intends this same night to slip in there awayes. 1682 in Jrnl. Friends' Hist. Soc. IV. 151, I would have y⊇ to mynd my love to friends there⁓aways and at Darnton. 1791 ‘G. Gambado’ Ann. Hors... Oxford English Dictionary
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cockader
coˈckader rare. One who wears a cockade.1791 ‘G. Gambado’ Acad. Horsem. xv. (1809) 122 A young Cockader, about town. 1870 Life Mother Marg. Mary Halluhan (ed. 3) 239 Escorted..by the two blue cockaders. Oxford English Dictionary
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ipse
† ipse, pron. and n. [L. ipse he himself, very.] ‖ 1. pron. Himself; truly himself; in his right mind.1579 Lyly Euphues (Arb.) 106 Though Curio be olde huddle and twang, ipse, he. 1787 ‘G. Gambado’ Acad. Horsemen (1809) 28 note, Our author could not be, ipse, he, when he wrote this! 2. n. A slang na... Oxford English Dictionary
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egad
egad, int. (ɪˈgæd) Also 7 igad, 8 egod. [prob. representing earlier A God! from a interjection: but in later times perhaps associated with asseverations, like i'faith, or possibly with by God: cf. agad, adad, adod, ecod, etc.] Used as a softened oath.1673 [R. Leigh] Transp. Reh. 4 Which is very civi... Oxford English Dictionary
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daisy-cutter
ˈdaisy-cutter [lit. ‘cutter of daisies’: see daisy n. 1 b.] 1. A horse that in trotting lifts its feet only very slightly from the ground.1791 ‘G. Gambado’ Ann. Horsem. xvi. (1809) 129, I luckily picked up a Daisy-cutter, by his throwing me down on the smoothest part of the grass. 1847 Youatt Horse ... Oxford English Dictionary
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-ado
-ado, suffix of ns. 1. a. Sp. or Pg. -ado masc. of pa. pple., as El Dorado the gilded:—L. deaurātus; desperado one out of hope:—desperātus; tornado (Pg.) that which is turned or whirled; renegado one who has re-denied the faith, now renegade. 2. An ignorant sonorous refashioning of ns. in -ade, a. F... Oxford English Dictionary
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