spatterdash

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spatterdash
spatterdash (ˈspætədæʃ) [f. spatter v. + dash v. Cf. spatter-lash, -plash, and the dial. splatter-, spattle-dash(er).] A kind of long gaiter or legging of leather, cloth, etc., to keep the trousers or stockings from being spattered, esp. in riding. Chiefly in pl.sing. 1687 E. Ravenscroft Long Vac., ... Oxford English Dictionary
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Spatterdash
Spatterdash may refer to: Gaiters Spats (footwear) Spatter (disambiguation) wikipedia.org
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splatterdash
ˈsplatterdash rare. [See spatterdash.] A long gaiter or legging; a spatterdash.1772 Nugent Hist. Fr. Gerund II. 261 White linen splatter-dashes with blue stripes beautiful to behold. 1881 A. M'Lachlan in Edwards Mod. Sc. Poets Ser. ii. 261 His legs they were..button'd upward to the knee Wi' great dr... Oxford English Dictionary
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Spatter
Blood spatter Spatter cone, volcano cone Spatterdock, water plant See also Spat (disambiguation) Spatterdash (disambiguation) Splatter (disambiguation wikipedia.org
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spatter-lash
† spatter-lash, -plash varr. spatterdash.1687 Miége Gt. Fr. Dict., Spatter-dashes, or (as they call em in the West) Spatter-plashes, guêtres. 1725 Bailey Erasm. Colloq. 131 Where have you been, with your Spatter Lashes? Oxford English Dictionary
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John Richards (actor)
1676) Shift in The Cheats of Scapin by Thomas Otway (1676) Dameta in Pastor Fido by Elkanah Settle (1676) Stephano in The Rover by Aphra Behn (1677) Spatterdash wikipedia.org
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spatterdasher
spatterdasher Obs. exc. dial. = spatterdash.1684 Yorks. Dial. 373 (E.D.S.), Wife, what's become of my Spatterdashers? 1711 Lond. Gaz. No. 4809/4 A pair of Spatterdashers. 1767 Connoisseur No. 79 ¶2 (ed. 5) III. 60 He wore upon his legs something that resembled spatterdashers [1755–61 spatterdashes]. Oxford English Dictionary
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Thomas Knight (actor)
Wilkinson, who was greatly disappointed with him, advised him to quit the stage, but Knight struggled on, playing Charles Oakley, Spatterdash in the Young On 27 October 1787 he played at the Bath Theatre as the Copper Captain, Spatterdash, Ramilie in the 'Miser', Duke of Monmouth in 'Such things were', and wikipedia.org
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spatter
▪ I. † ˈspatter, n.1 Obs. [Alteration of spatour spature.] A spatule.1569 R. Androse tr. Alexis' Secr. iv. ii. 40 Worke it with a spatter, vntill it be come vnto the heigth of waxe. Ibid. iii. 25 Laboring them with the spatter. Ibid. 45 Working it alwayes with a spatter. 1590 P. Barrough Meth. Physi... Oxford English Dictionary
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A Fond Husband
Ranger, James Nokes as Peregrine Bubble, Anthony Leigh as Old Fumble, Samuel Sandford as Sir Roger Petulant, Thomas Jevon as Sneak, John Richards as Spatterdash wikipedia.org
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spat
▪ I. spat, n.1 (spæt) Also 7 spatt. [Of obscure origin; perh. related to spit v.1] 1. a. The spawn of oysters or other shell-fish.[1376–7 Rolls of Parlt. II. 369/1 Il destruit..le spat des oistres, musklys, & d'autres Pessons.]1667 Sprat Hist. R. Soc. 307 In the Month of May the Oysters cast their S... Oxford English Dictionary
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gaffle
† ˈgaffle Obs. Also 5 gaffolle, 6–7 gaffel(l, 7 gafel, 8 gafle. [prob. a. Du. gaffel = OE. ᵹeafol, Ger. gabel fork: see gable.] 1. A steel lever for bending the cross-bow.1497 Naval Acc. Hen. VII (1896) 110 Bowes v, Arowes v..Shot of ston for demy curtowes..clij, Gaffolles of iren..ij. 1598 Florio, ... Oxford English Dictionary
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List of French words of Germanic origin (H–Z)
"a tuft, topknot" houppelande "overcoat" hourder "to roughcast" houseau "spatterdash" houspiller "to nag, worry, mob" ( < Norm gouspiller < a Gmc compound wikipedia.org
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cutikin
cutikin Sc. (ˈk{smY}tɪkɪn) Also cuttikin, cuittikin, cuitican. [f. cuit, cute, coot2, ancle, with dim. suffix.] A gaiter, a spatterdash.1816 Scott Antiq. xi, As he exchanged his slippers for a pair of stout walking shoes, with cutikins, as he called them, of black cloth. 1833 Moir Mansie Wauch vi. (... Oxford English Dictionary
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huseau
† huseau Obs. [a. obs. F. houseau (Cotgr.) ‘a course drawer worne ouer a Stocking instead of a Boot’ (cf. OF. housel in Godef.), dim. of OF. (and F. dial.) house, heuse, husse boot.] Some kind of boot or legging. Husens in the first quot. is app. an error for huseus = huseaus, for which huseans in C... Oxford English Dictionary
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