Corsica. A Phœnician term for “wooded isle.”
Cossack. The Russian form of the Tartar term kasake, a horseman.
Costa Rica. Spanish for “rich coast.”
Costermonger. In Shakespeare’s time a Costardmonger, or trader in a famous species of apple so called.
Cottonopolis. Manchester, the city identified with English cotton manufacture.
Cotton Plantation State. Alabama, from its staple industry.
Cotton to. An Americanism meaning to cling to a man as cotton would cling to his garments.
Counter-jumper. The derisive nickname of a draper’s assistant, on account of his agility in leaping over the counter as a short cut from one department to another.
Country Dance. A corruption of the French contre danse, from the opposite positions of the dancers.
Coup de Grace. The merciful finishing stroke of the executioner after a criminal had been tortured by having all his bones broken on a wheel. One blow on the head then put him out of his misery.
Court Cards. Properly Coat Cards, on account of their heraldic devices.
Court of Arches. The ecclesiastical Court of Appeal for the Archbishopric of Canterbury which in ancient times was held in the crypt of St Mary-le-Bow, or St Mary of the Arches at Cheapside. See “Bow Church.”
68Court Plaster. The plaster out of which ladies of the Court fashioned their decorative (?) face patches.
Covenanters. Those who entered into a Solemn League or Covenant to resist the religious and political measures of Charles I. in 1638.
Covent Garden. A corruption of Convent Garden, the site of which was converted into a market, temp. Charles II. The convent and garden belonged to the Abbey at Westminster.
Coventry. A corruption of Conventry–i.e. Convent town. Before the Reformation it was far famed for the number of its conventual establishments. The suffix try is Celtic for “dwelling.”
Coventry Street. From the residence of Henry Coventry, Secretary of State, temp. Charles II.
Cowcross Street. Where the cattle crossed the brook in days when this now congested neighbourhood was pleasant pasture land watered by the “River of Wells.”
Coxcomb. A vain, empty-pated individual. So called from the cock’s comb worn on the cap by the licensed jesters, because they were allowed to crow over their betters.
Cracker. Although the origin of this term when applied to a juvenile firework would appear to be self-evident, it is really a corruption of Cracque, the Norman description of “Greek Fire.”
Crackers. The people of Georgia, owing, it is said, to the unintelligibility of their speech.
Cranbourn Street. From the long, narrow stream of this name, when the whole district hereabouts was open fields.
Crank. One whose notions of things are angular, eccentric, or crooked. His ideas do not run in a straight line.
Cravat. Introduced into Western Europe by the Cravates or Croatians in the seventeenth century.
69Craven Street. From the residence of Lord Craven prior to his removal to Drury House in Drury Lane.
Cream City. Milwaukee, from the cream-coloured bricks of which its houses are built.
Credit Draper. The modern designation of a “Tallyman.”
Cree Church. See “St Katherine Cree.”
Creed Lane. Where the monks recited the Credo in procession to St Paul’s. See “Ave Maria Lane.”
Cremorne Gardens. Laid out on the site of the mansion and grounds of Thomas Dawson, Lord Cremorne.
Creole State. Louisiana. In New Orleans particularly a Creole is a native of French extraction.
Crescent City. New Orleans, built in the form of a crescent.
Crimea. From the Kimri or Cymri who settled in the peninsula.
Cripplegate. From the city gate around which gathered cripples begging for alms, the neighbouring church being dedicated to St Giles, their patron.
Crokers. Potatoes, because first raised in Croker’s Field at Youghal, Ireland.
Cromwell Road. From the mansion and grounds of Richard Cromwell, son of the Lord Protector.
Crop Clubs. Clubs formed to evade Mr Pitt’s tax on hair powder. The Times thus noticed one of the earliest in its issue of 14th April 1795: “A numerous Club has been formed in Lambeth called the ‘Crop Club,’ every member of which is obliged to have his hair docked as close as the Duke of Bridgewater’s old bay horses. This assemblage is instituted for the purpose of opposing, or rather evading, the tax on powdered heads.”
Cross Keys. A common inn sign throughout Yorkshire, from the arms of the Archbishop of York.
70Crowd. Theatrical slang for members of a company collectively.
Crow over him. A cock always crows over a vanquished opponent in a fight.
Crutched Friars. Friars of the Holy Trinity, so called from the embroidered cross on their habits (Latin, cruciati, crossed). Their London house was located in the thoroughfare named after them.
Cuba. The native name of the island when Columbus discovered it.
Cully. A slang term applied to a man, mate, or companion. Its origin is the Romany cuddy, from the Persian gudda, an ass.
Cumberland. The land of the Cymri.
Cupboard. See “Dresser.”
Curaçoa. A liqueur first prepared at the West Indian island of the same name.
Currants. First brought from Corinth.
Cursitor Street. From the Cursitors’ Office that stood here. The Cursitors were clerks of Chancery, but anciently choristers, just as the Lord Chancellor himself was an ecclesiastic.
Curtain Road. From the “Curtain Theatre,” where Ben Jonson’s “Every Man in his Humour” was put on the stage.
Curzon Street. From George Augustus Curzon, created Viscount Howe, the ground landlord.
Cuspidor. The American term for a spittoon, derived from the Spanish escupidor, a spitter.
Cut me to the Quick. The quick of one’s fingers when cut into is most alive or sensitive to pain. See “Quicksilver.”
Cutpurse. A thief who, in days before pockets came into vogue, had no difficulty in cutting the strings with which a purse was suspended from the girdle.
71Cut the Line. A printer’s expression for knocking off work. Formerly compositors finished the line they were composing; nowadays Trades Unionism has made them so particular that they leave off in the middle of a line on the first stroke of the bell.
Cypress. A tree introduced to Western Europe from the island of Cyprus.
Cyprus. From kupras, the Greek name for a herb which grew on the island in profusion.
D
Dachshund. German for “badger-dog.”
Daffodil. An English corruption of the French d’Asphodel.
Dagonet. The pseudonym of Mr George R. Sims in The Referee, after the jester at the Court of King Arthur.
Daguerreotype. An early process of photography discovered by L. J. M. Daguerre.
Dahlgreen Gun. After its inventor, an officer in the United States Navy.
Dahlia. Introduced to Europe from Mexico in 1784 by Andrew Dahl, the Swedish botanist.
Daisy. From the Anglo-Saxon dæges eye, or “day’s eye,” on account of its sunlike appearance.
Dakota. From the Dacoits, a tribe of Indians found there.
Dale Road. From the residence of Canon Dale, poet, and Vicar of St Pancras.
Dalmatian. A species of dog bred in Dalmatia.
Dalston. The town in the dale when the north of London was more or less wooded.
Damage. See “What’s the Damage?”
Damascenes. From Damascus, famous for its plums.
Damascus. From the Arabic name of the city, Dimiskesh-Shâm.
72Damascus Blade. From Damascus, a city world famous for the temper of its sword blades.
Damask. First made at Damascus in Syria.
Damask Rose. Introduced to Europe from Damascus.
Damassin. A Damask cloth interwoven with flowers of gold or silver.
Dame School. The old name for a girls’ school taught by a spinster or dame.
Damsons. Properly Damascenes, from Damascus.
Dancing Chancellor. Sir Christopher Hatton so pleased Queen Elizabeth by his dancing at a Court masque that she made him a Knight of the Garter; subsequently he became Lord Chancellor of England.