Sons and Lovers (Barnes & Noble Classics - D. H. Lawrence [229]
s
Spiritless coward or weakling.
t
Boss.
u
Coal wall on which a team of miners worked.
v
Chunk of hard clay.
w
Shuffle.
x
Tub for collecting rainwater.
y
Game like bowling.
z
Popular, sentimental song of the day.
aa
Burner on the stove.
ab
To waste (dialect).
ac
Lunch bag.
ad
Person who distributed unfinished stockings to female workers to stitch the back seam at home for extra money.
ae
Bowlful; a reference to copper bowls used for laundry.
af
Small, horse-drawn cart.
ag
Go quickly.
ah
Reheat and chop leftover meat for a meal.
ai
A colloquialism tacked on to the end of phrases or sentences; it has no literal meaning.
aj
Signal to stop work.
ak
Lift used to transport coal and coal miners between the pit and the surface.
al
A minister’s house.
am
Congested, clogged.
an
Anything.
ao
Puddled.
ap
Fools.
aq
Shock, blow.
ar
Pains.
as
Local aid societies.
at
Spoiled.
au
Game like horseshoes played by tossing a ring on or close to a pin.
av
Children’s rhyme.
aw
Desk job.
ax
Country dances.
ay
Scottish, from the Highlands of Britain.
az
Mother (Latin, but common in British usage).
ba
“Apostle”; here used to refer to Paul as the Apostle Paul.
bb
Flighty person.
bc
Game like hide-and-seek.
bd
Impudence.
be
Ruffian.
bf
Snag.
bg
Anvil shaped like a goose’s neck.
bh
Untrustworthy.
bi
Sneaks.
bj
Gentle.
bk
Tobacco.
bl
Infested.
bm
Dish made by boiling wheat in milk and seasoning with cinnamon and sugar.
bn
Thicket or small grove that is periodically cut back.
bo
Beat, as in “you beat me here.”
bp
Condescendingly (French).
bq
Simpleton.
br
Hat ornamentation made of fur or foxtail.
bs
Box.
bt
Colloquialism tacked on to the end of sentences and phrases; it has no literal meaning.
bu
Tough.
bv
Baking.
bw
Game in which children sing around a circle.
bx
Outer slip like an apron.
by
Children’s song that accompanies a ring game.
bz
Eager.
ca
Thrown.
cb
Pantry.
cc
Stones.
cd
Gangrene.
ce
Living by money received from the local aid societies, or clubs.
cf
Fashionable suit worn with a loose-fitting jacket and waist belt.
cg
The former is an art shop, the latter a drug store selling herbal remedies.
ch
Watercolor brush made from the soft fur of the sable.
ci
The equivalent, in today’s terms, of “Get out of town!”
cj
Popular narcotic and painkiller made from morphia, chloroform, Indian hemp, and prussic acid.
ck
Suspicious.
cl
“I’ll be darned.”
cm
Variety of domestic fowl, the cocks of which are known to be feisty fighters.
cn
Popular song about a supposed infidelity.
co
Humorous pronunciation of au revoir, “goodbye” (French).
cp
In quiet voices; from sotto, “under,” and voce, “voice” (Latin).
cq
Little robin.
cr
Surprised.
cs
Fashionable person.
ct
Person with no practical ability.
cu
Whistle.
cv
Very fine silk.
cw
Candied chestnuts (French).
cx
Father.
cy
Field left uncultivated for a year or more to help replenish the soil for future farming.
cz
“The last of a dying breed” (French).
da
Overburdened.
db
To embrace amorously; the word has a sexual connotation.
dc
Beaten to the punch by someone who got there first (Nottinghamshire dialect).
dd
Nothing but.
de
Old.
df
Popular song written in 1906 by Arthur J. Mills and Bennett Scott.
dg
Game played with cards.
dh
Working a desk job; literally, sitting on a chair.
di
British army uniform.
dj
Himself.
dk
Annual art show that received national attention.
dl
Half-worth of a weakling.
dm
More commonly spelled Michelangelo; Italian sculptor, architect, and painter in Renaissance Italy (1475-1564). D. H. Lawrence later describes Paul’s artistic style as having “a certain luminous quality, like some of Michael Angelo’s people. ...” (see page 329).
dn
Delicate, sensitive to cold.
do
Bundle of sticks.
dp
Crunch.
dq
Whiner.
dr
“It’s the truth.”
ds
Cold.
dt
Extra pair of pants for leisure.
du
Get dressed quickly.
dv
Quibbled.
dw
Irregular worker hired by the day.
dx
Special price for coal bought by miners at the mouth of the pit.