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Cold
·vi To become cold.
II. Cold ·noun Not pungent or acrid.
III. Cold ·noun Not sensitive; not acute....
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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cold
You will catch cold at that; a vulgar threat or advice to desist from an attempt. He caught cold by ...
Dictionary of The Vulgar Tongue by Francis Grose
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Fire
·vt To drive by fire.
II. Fire ·vt To <<Cauterize>>.
III. Fire ·vi To be irritated or inflamed wit...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Fire
1) For sacred purposes. The sacrifices were consumed by fire (Gen. 8:20). The ever-burning fire on t...
Easton's Bible Dictionary
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to fire
To fling with the hand, as a stone or other missile.
...
Dictionary of American Words And Phrases by John Russell Bartlett.
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fire!
The order to put the match to the priming, or pull the trigger of a cannon or other fire-arm so as t...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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Fire
is represented as the symbol of Jehovah's presence and the instrument of his power, in the way eithe...
William Smith's Bible Dictionary
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Cold wave
·add. ·- In the terminology of the United States Weather Bureau, an unusual fall in temperature, to ...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Cold-blooded
·adj Deficient in sensibility or feeling; hard-hearted.
II. Cold-blooded ·adj Not thoroughbred;
— ...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Cold-hearted
·adj Wanting passion or feeling; indifferent.
...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Cold-short
·adj Brittle when cold; as, cold-short iron.
II. Cold-short ·add. ·adj Brittle when cold (that is, ...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Cold-shut
·noun An imperfection caused by such insufficient welding.
II. Cold-shut ·adj Closed while too cold...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Key-cold
·adj Cold as a metallic key; lifeless.
...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Stone-cold
·adj Cold as a stone.
...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Cold Abbeye
A tenement so called in Wendageynes Lane held under the Fraternity of St. Katherine in the Church of...
A Dictionary of London by Henry A Harben.
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cold pye
A punishment inflicted on any person sleeping in company: it consists in wrapping up cotton in a cas...
Dictionary of The Vulgar Tongue by Francis Grose
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cold burning
A punishment inflicted by private soldiers on their comrades for trifling offences, or breach of the...
Dictionary of The Vulgar Tongue by Francis Grose
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cold cook
An undertaker of funerals, or carrion hunter.
See carrion hunter.
...
Dictionary of The Vulgar Tongue by Francis Grose
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cold iron
A sword, or any other weapon for cutting or stabbing. I gave him two inches of cold iron into his be...
Dictionary of The Vulgar Tongue by Francis Grose
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cold meat
A dead wife is the beat cold meat in a man's house.
...
Dictionary of The Vulgar Tongue by Francis Grose
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cold pig
To give cold pig is a punishment inflicted on sluggards who lie too long in bed: it consists in pull...
Dictionary of The Vulgar Tongue by Francis Grose
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cold pudding
This is said to settle one's love.
...
Dictionary of The Vulgar Tongue by Francis Grose
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bitter cold
Very cold. This common colloquial expression is used alike in England and America.
Those who say it...
Dictionary of American Words And Phrases by John Russell Bartlett.
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cold-chisel
A stout chisel made of steel, used for cutting iron when it is cold.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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cold-eel
The Gymnotus electricus.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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Anthony's Fire
·- ·see Saint Anthony's Fire, under <<Saint>>.
...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Ash-fire
·noun A low fire used in chemical operations.
...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Back fire
·add. ·- A fire started ahead of a forest or prairie fire to burn only against the wind, so that whe...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Back-fire
·add. ·vi To have or experience a back fire or back fires;
— said of an internal-combustion engine....
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Elmo's fire
·- ·see <<Corposant>>; also Saint Elmo's Fire, under <<Saint>>.
...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Fire beetle
·- A very brilliantly luminous beetle (Pyrophorus noctilucus), one of the elaters, found in Central ...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Fire-fanged
·adj Injured as by fire; burned;
— said of manure which has lost its goodness and acquired an ashy ...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Fire-new
·adj Fresh from the forge; bright; quite new; brand-new.
...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Fire-set
·noun A set of fire irons, including, commonly, tongs, shovel, and poker.
...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Knobbling fire
·- A bloomery fire. ·see <<Bloomery>>.
...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Pin-fire
·add. ·adj Having a firing pin to explode the cartridge; as, a pin-fire rifle.
...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Rapid-fire
·add. ·adj ·Alt. of Rapid-firing.
...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Rim-fire
·add. ·adj Having the percussion fulminate in a rim surrounding the base, distinguished from center-...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
-
fire priggers
Villains who rob at fires under pretence of assisting in removing the goods.
...
Dictionary of The Vulgar Tongue by Francis Grose
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fire ship
A wench who has the venereal disease.
...
Dictionary of The Vulgar Tongue by Francis Grose
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fire shovel
He or she when young, was fed with a fire shovel; a saying of persons with wide mouths.
...
Dictionary of The Vulgar Tongue by Francis Grose
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spit fire
A violent, pettish, or passionate person.
...
Dictionary of The Vulgar Tongue by Francis Grose
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bush-fire
n.
forests and grass on fire in hotsummers.
1868. C. Dilke, `Greater Britain,' vol. ii. part iii. ...
Dictionary of Australasian Words Phrases and Usages by Edward E. Morris
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fire-stick
n.
name given to thelighted stick which the Australian natives frequently carryabout, when moving f...
Dictionary of Australasian Words Phrases and Usages by Edward E. Morris
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fire-tree
n.
a tree of New Zealand; anothername for Pohutukawa (q.v.). For QueenslandFire-tree, see Tulip-tre...
Dictionary of Australasian Words Phrases and Usages by Edward E. Morris
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to fire away
To begin; to go on. An expression borrowed from the language of soldiers and sailors.
A well-known ...
Dictionary of American Words And Phrases by John Russell Bartlett.
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fire-cracker
A little paper cylinder filled with powder or combustible matter, imported from China. It receives i...
Dictionary of American Words And Phrases by John Russell Bartlett.
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fire-new
New from the forge; brand-new.--Johnson. This old and nearly obsolete expression is sometimes used b...
Dictionary of American Words And Phrases by John Russell Bartlett.
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shel fire
electric sparks, often seen on clothes at night. Kent.
...
A glossary of provincial and local words used in England by Francis Grose
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fire-elding
The word Fire is redundant; for Elding itself means fuel.
...
A glossary of provincial and local words used in England by Francis Grose
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fire-flaughts
lightning, or the northern lights. N.
...
A glossary of provincial and local words used in England by Francis Grose
-
fire-potter
a poker. Lane.
...
A glossary of provincial and local words used in England by Francis Grose
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concentrated fire
The bringing the whole or several guns to bear on a single point.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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curved fire
A name coming into use with the increasing application of the fire of heavy and elongated shells to ...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
direct fire
One of the five varieties into which artillerists usually divide horizontal fire (which see).
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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enfilade fire
Is that which sweeps a line of works or men from one end to the other; it is on land nearly the equi...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-flaire
See fiery-flaw
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-arms
Every description of arms that discharge missiles by gunpowder, from the heaviest cannon to a pistol...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-arrows
Missiles in olden times carrying combustibles; much used in the sea-fights of the middle ages.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
fire-away
Go on with your remarks.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-ball
In meteorology, a beautiful phenomenon seen at times, the origin of which is as yet imperfectly acco...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-balls
Are used for destroying vessels run aground, and firing buildings. They are made of a composition of...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
fire-bare
An old term from the Anglo-Saxon for beacon.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-bars
The range fronting a steam-boiler.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
fire-bill
The distribution of the officers and crew in case of the alarm of fire, a calamity requiring judicio...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
fire-booms
Long spars swung out from a ship's side to prevent the approach of fire-ships, fire-stages, or vesse...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
fire-box
A space crossing the whole front of the boiler over the furnace doors, opposite the smoke-box.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
fire-buckets
Canvas, leather, or wood buckets for quarters, each fitted with a sinnet laniard of regulated length...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
fire-door
An access to the fire-place of an engine.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-drake
A meteor, or the Corpo Santo. Also, a peculiar fire-work, which Shakspeare in Henry VIII. thus menti...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
fire-eater
One notoriously fond of being in action; much humbled by iron-clads.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
fire-flaughts
The aurora borealis, or northern lights.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-hearth
The security base of the galley-range and all its conveniences.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
fire-hoops
A combustible invented by the knights of Malta to throw among their besiegers, and afterwards used i...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
fire-lock
Formerly the common name for a musket; the fire-arm carried by a foot-soldier, marine, or small-arm ...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
fire-rafts
Timber constructions bearing combustible matters, used by the Chinese to destroy an enemy's vessel.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
fire-rails
See rails.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
fire-roll
A peculiar beat of the drum to order people to their stations on an alarm of fire. Summons to quarte...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
fire-screens
Pieces of fear-nought, a thick woollen felt put round the hatchways in action.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
fire-ship
A vessel filled with combustible materials, and fitted with grappling-irons, to hook and set fire to...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
fire-swab
The bunch of rope-yarns sometimes secured to the tompion, saturated with water to cool the gun in ac...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
fire-works
See pyrotechny.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
galling-fire
A sustained discharge of cannon, or small arms, which by its execution greatly annoys the enemy.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
grazing-fire
That which sweeps close to the surface it defends.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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gun-fire
The morning or evening guns, familiarly termed "the admiral falling down the hatchway."
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
hang-fire
When the priming burns without igniting the cartridge, or the charge does not rapidly ignite after p...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
horizontal fire
From artillery, is that in which the piece is laid either direct on the object, or with but small el...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
plunging fire
A pitching discharge of shot from a higher level, at such an angle that the shot do not ricochet.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
port-fire
A stick of composition, generally burning an inch a minute, used to convey fire from the slow-match ...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
vertical fire
In artillery, that directed upward at such an angle as that it will fall vertically, or nearly so, t...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
Rapid-fire mount
·add. ·- A mount permitting easy and quick elevation or depression and training of the gun, and fitt...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
-
Flame of fire
Is the chosen symbol of the holiness of God (Ex. 3:2; Rev. 2:18), as indicating "the intense, all-co...
Easton's Bible Dictionary
-
Fire Ball Alley
See Partridge Court.
...
A Dictionary of London by Henry A Harben.
-
Fire Ball court
East out of Houndsditch. In Portsoken Ward (25 Eliz. 1583) (Lond. Inq. p.m. III. p. 64) to O.S. 25 i...
A Dictionary of London by Henry A Harben.
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Fire Ball Court
Near First (Aldermanbury) Postern, London Wall (Strype, ed. 1755-Boyle, 1799).
Not named in the map...
A Dictionary of London by Henry A Harben.
-
Fire of London
In 1666, from September 2nd to 6th.
Commenced at the house of a baker in Pudding Lane, near London ...
A Dictionary of London by Henry A Harben.
-
Sun Fire Office
See Bank Buildings1, Cornhill.
...
A Dictionary of London by Henry A Harben.
-
to fire a slug
To drink a dram.
...
Dictionary of The Vulgar Tongue by Francis Grose
-
hell fire dick
The Cambridge driver of the Telegraph. The favorite companion of the University fashionables, and th...
Dictionary of The Vulgar Tongue by Francis Grose
-
elmo's fire, st.
See compasant.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
fire, loss by
Is within the policy of insurance, whether it be by accident, or by the fault of the master or marin...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
fire-and-lights
Nickname of the master-at-arms.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
fire-hearth-carline
The timber let in under the beams on which the fire-hearth stands, with pillars underneath, and choc...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
repeating fire-arm
One by which a number of charges, previously inserted, may be fired off in rapid succession, or afte...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
cold as presbyterian charity
I know not the origin of this saying, and am not aware that there is less charity in this sect than ...
Dictionary of American Words And Phrases by John Russell Bartlett.
-
Burnt in the Fire 1666.
Not further identified.
...
A Dictionary of London by Henry A Harben.
-
false fire, blue flames
A composition of combustibles filled into a wooden tube, which, upon being set fire to, burns with a...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
Hand in Hand Fire Office
At No. 1 Bridge Street, Blackfriars, on the east side (Elmes, 1831).
Est. 1696 in Angel Court, Snow...
A Dictionary of London by Henry A Harben.
-
Phoenix Assurance Co., Fire Offlce
On the south side of Lombard Street at the northeast corner of Abchurch Lane at No.19 (P.O. Director...
A Dictionary of London by Henry A Harben.
-
to fire into the wrong flock
is a metaphorical expression used at the West, denoting that one has mistaken his object, as when a ...
Dictionary of American Words And Phrases by John Russell Bartlett.
-
to have one's fat in the fire
is to have one's plans frustrated. A vulgar expression borrowed from the vocabulary of the kitchen.
...
Dictionary of American Words And Phrases by John Russell Bartlett.