1811 Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue: Regency Slang, Georgian Street Cant, Criminal Argot, and Bawdy English Colloquial Speech

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Synopsis

Francis Grose's 1811 Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue is a vivid lexicon of English slang, cant, tavern idiom, criminal argot, and bawdy colloquial speech at the turn of the nineteenth century. Neither polite dictionary nor mere curiosity, it records the phrases excluded from Johnsonian respectability, arranging them with brisk definitions, comic sharpness, and ethnographic attentiveness. Its literary context is the world of street ballads, jest books, picaresque fiction, and urban satire, where language reveals class, vice, wit, and survival. Grose, an antiquary, former militia officer, and indefatigable collector, was drawn to the marginal, the local, and the socially overlooked. His antiquarian habits informed not only studies of ruins and folklore but also this catalogue of living speech. Though the 1811 form is posthumous and revised, it preserves his appetite for linguistic evidence gathered from soldiers, tradesmen, rogues, and convivial society. This book is recommended to readers interested in historical linguistics, literature, social history, and the unruly life of English. It offers an indispensable, often hilarious, archive of words that polite culture tried to forget.

Publisher information

  • Publisher: Sharp Ink
  • ISBN: 9788028330996
  • Dimensions: 229 x 152 x 10 mm
  • Weight: 267g
  • Languages: English