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Definition 2024


Abram_cove

Abram cove

See also: Abram-cove

English

Alternative forms

Noun

Abram cove (plural Abram coves)

  1. (archaic, Britain, cant) A naked or poor man.
  2. (archaic, Britain, cant) Synonym of Abraham man

Quotations

  • ca 1608, Thomas Dekker, English Villanies:
    An Abram cove [...]
  • 1902, Herbert Compton, A Free Lance in a Far Land, page 94:
    What, you — you bit av a beak and trail. Ecod, but Bess is meat for your master, and that's me, as you'll soon know. She's an old wench o' mine, and I'll buss her when I choose, and ask no leave of an Abram cove of corporal like you afore I run you through the body."
  • 1827, Horace Smith, Reuben Apsley, page 121:
    "Curse him, Squire," croaked Chinnery, "don't suffer such an Abram cove to play the counterfeit crank. If he were to refuse to booze it at the George in White Friars, the Bear and Harrow in Chancery Lane, the Setting Dog and Partridge in Jackanapes Alley, or any of the loyal houses in London, they would mill him with a filch, or give him a worse Rose-Alley salutation than Johnny Dryden's."
  • 1869, William Hugh Logan, A pedlar's pack of ballads and songs:
    Duds and Cheats thou oft hast won, / [...] / Cank and Dommerar thou couldst play, / Or Rum-maunder in one day; / And like an Abram-cove couldst pray, / Yet pass with Jybes well jerk'd away.
  • 1933, Montague Summers, The Werewolf:
    So loathly was he and verminous they scarce could seize and bind him, but when haled before the magistrate he proved to be an abram-cove named Jacques Roulet, who with his brother Jean and a cousin Julien [...]

References

  • Grose, Francis (1788) A Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue, 2nd edition, London: S. Hooper
  • Grose, Francis, The Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue / Lexicon Balatronicum: A Dictionary of Buckish Slang, University Wit, and Pickpocket Eloquence: altered and enlarged (London; 1811)
  • Barrère, Albert; Leland, Charles Godfrey (1889) A Dictionary of Slang, Jargon & Cant, volume 1, pages 7–8
  • Farmer, John Stephen (1890) Slang and Its Analogues, volume 1, pages 9–10