snudge

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1
snudge
▪ I. snudge, n. (snʌdʒ) [Cf. snudge v.1, and see also snowge, snuch.] 1. A miser, a mean avaricious person, a niggard; a sneaking or sponging fellow. Now dial. Very common from c 1550 to 1610.1545 R. Ascham Toxoph. i. (Arb.) 28 Thus youre husbandrie me thinke, is more like the life of a couetouse sn... Oxford English Dictionary
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Bootsie and Snudge
Snudge enjoys his position of superiority over Bootsie, whilst Bootsie feels comfortable in his position as it allows him to mock and hate Snudge (and Not all 104 episodes of Bootsie and Snudge have survived. wikipedia.org
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snudgery
† ˈsnudgery Obs. rare—1. [f. snudge n.] Miserliness.1599 Nashe Lent. Stuffe 3 Those graybeard huddle-duddles..were stroke with such stinging remorse of their miserable Euclionisme and snudgery. Oxford English Dictionary
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Derek Bennett (director)
Bennett is known for directing programmes such as The Odd Man, Bootsie and Snudge and It's Dark Outside. wikipedia.org
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snidge
snidge Now Lanc. dial. Also 6 snydge. [var. of snudge n.] A greedy or miserly person.1548 Forrest Pleas. Poesye 97 For suche solayne snydges [do thou] caste reformation by forfeture too the poores sustentation. 1855 J. Davies in Trans. Philol. Soc. 272 Snidge, a greedy, sordid person. Oxford English Dictionary
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Barry Took
His decade-and-a-half writing partnership with Marty Feldman led to the television series Bootsie and Snudge, the radio comedy Round the Horne and other The two men wrote for several television shows in the 1950s and 1960s, including The Army Game and its spin-off Bootsie and Snudge. wikipedia.org
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snuch
† snuch Obs.—1 [Related to snudge in the same way as slutch, smutch, to sludge, smudge.] = snudge n.1579–80 North Plutarch (1595) 135 But in the ende..this bribing wretch was forced for to hold a typling booth, most like a clowne or snuch. Oxford English Dictionary
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Bill Fraser
He then joined The Army Game as Sgt Claude Snudge, followed by a sequel called Bootsie and Snudge. He also played Snudge in the 1964 series Foreign Affairs. wikipedia.org
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snoodle
snoodle, v. dial. (chiefly north.) or nursery. Now rare. (ˈsnuːd(ə)l) [See Eng. Dial. Dict.: prob. rel. to snudge v.2, snuggle v., etc.] intr. To snuggle, nestle. Also trans.1887 in T. Darlington Folk-Speech S. Cheshire 355. 1898 R. Dottie Rambles & Recoll. ‘{oqq}R{cqq} Dick’ 115 Eaur snug, white ho... Oxford English Dictionary
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Leon Cortez
Dice Player in Echo Four Two (1961); Lapie in Maigret (1961); Citizen James; Honest Arthur in Suspense (1963); First Driver / Court Usher in Bootsie and Snudge wikipedia.org
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munchion
munchion, v. Obs. rare. [? f. munch v., after nuncheon. Cf. munchin.] intr. ? To munch.1611 Cotgr. s.v. Manger, Manger son pain en son sac, to snudge it, or munchion alone in a corner. Oxford English Dictionary
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Bootsie
may refer to: Bootsie Barnes, tenor saxophonist from Philadelphia, PA Bootsy Collins (born 1951), funk bassist, singer, and songwriter Bootsie and Snudge wikipedia.org
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sneakbill
† ˈsneakbill Obs. Also 6 sneke-, sneek-, 7 sneake- (and sneaksbill). [Of obscure origin: cf. sneaksby.] A mean or paltry fellow; a starved or thin-faced person. Also attrib.1562 J. Heywood Prov. & Epigr. (1867) 72 Why will ye..I shall folow hir will? To make me Iohn drawlache, or such a snekebill. 1... Oxford English Dictionary
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Patrick Ryan (English author)
Punch and The New Scientist in the 1960s and 1970s, as well as writing several television plays and some episodes of "The Army Game" and "Bootsie and Snudge wikipedia.org
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snowge
† snowge obs. form of snudge n. 1.c 1570 Durham Deposit. (Surtees) 106 Sainge that the said Bartram was a covetous snowge. Ibid. 107. Oxford English Dictionary
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