KIPLING'S SUSSEX - online book

An illustrated descriptive guide, to the places mentioned in
the writings of Rudyard Kipling.

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APPENDIX.
SUSSEX PROVINCIALISMS
Adone ----- Have done ; Leave off j
v" I am told on good authority that when a Sussex damsel says, ' Oh ! do adone,' she means you to go on ; but when she says, ' Adone-do,' you must leave off immediately."
Apse.....
Aspen-tree.
Beazle -
To bother ; to tease.
Bee Jam -
Honey.
Bettermost -
Superior.
Bine.....
The Hop-stalk.
Bleat.....
Cold as a " Bleat wind."
Bosky.....
Tipsy.
Coager.....
(Cold Cheer) A meal of cold victuals taken at noon.
Concerned in liquor - - Tipsy.
" The man wasn't drunk—only a little concerned in liquor, like—and his back was a mask where he'd slipped in the muck coming along."—Kipling's " Friendly Brook."
Dentical -                               Dainty.
" My Master says that this here Prooshian (query Persian) cat what you gave me is a deal too dentical for a poor man's cat j he wants one as will catch the meece and keep herself."
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