subs. (Fenian: obsolete).1. See quot.
d. 1883. H. J. BYRON [MS. note to HOTTENS Slang Dictionary: now in B. Museum]. The title of a captain in the army of the Irish Republican Brotherhood.
2. (Harrow).A standard in Gymnasium the next below A (q.v.).
3. (Felsted).See A.
NOT TO KNOW B FROM A BULLS FOOT (A BATTLEDORE, A BROOMSTICK, or any alliterative jingle), phr. (old).To be illiterate or ignorant; to be unable to distinguish which is which: also affirmatively, see A, BATTLEDORE, CHALK, etc.
1401. Political Poems, II. 57. I know not an A from the wynd-mylne, ne a B FROM A BOLE FOOT.
155387. FOXE, Acts and Monuments, II. 474. He KNEW NOT A B FROM A BATTLEDORE nor ever a letter of the book.
1592. NASHE, Pierce Penilesse, His Supplication to the Divell, 30b. Now you TALKE OF A BEE. ILE TELL YOU A TALE OF A BATTLEDORE and write in prayse of vertue. Ibid. (1599), Lenten Stuffe (1885), v. 197. EVERY MAN CAN SAY BEE TO A BATTLEDORE and write in prayse of Vertue.
1609. DEKKER, The Guls Horne-booke, 3. You shall not neede to buy bookes; no, scorne to DISTINGUISH A B FROM A BATTLEDORE.
1613. KING, Halfepennyworth of Wit, Dedication. Simple honest dunce, as I am, that CANNOT SAY B TO A BATTLEDORE, it is very presumptuously done of me to offer to hey-passe and repasse it in print so.
1621. MONTAGU, Diatribæ, 118. The clergy of this time were NOT ABLE TO SAY BO TO A BATTLEDORE.
1630. TAYLOR (The Water Poet), Dedication. For in this age of criticks are such store, That OF A B WILL MAKE A BATTLEDOOR. Ibid., Dedication to Odcombs Complaint. To the gentlemen readers that UNDERSTAND A B FROM A BATTLEDOOR.
1663. HOWELL, English Proverbs, 16. He KNOWETH NOT A B. FROM A BATTLEDOOR.
1672. RAY, Proverbs, s.v.
1677. G. MIEGE, Dictionary, French and English, 128. BATTLEDORE formerly a term for a hornbook, and hence no doubt arose the phrase TO KNOW A B FROM A BATTLEDORE.
1846. BRACKENRIDGE, Modern Chivalry, 43. There were members who SCARCELY KNEW B FROM A BULLS-FOOT.
1877. PEACOCK, Manly (Lincolnshire) Glossary, s.v. BATTLEDOOR. He does NT KNOW HIS A.B.C. FRA A BATTLEDOOR.
1884. W. BLACK, Judith Shakespeare, xxi. Fools that SCARCE KNOW A B FROM A BATTLEDORE.
B FLAT (or B), subs. phr. (common).A bed bug; a NORFOLK HOWARD (q.v.): cf. F SHARP.
1853. DICKENS, Household Words xx. 326. A stout negro of the flat back tribeknown among comic writers as B FLATS.
1867. Cornhill Magazine, April, 450. That little busy B which invariably improves the darkness at the expense of every offering traveller.
1881. T. HUGHES, Rugby, Tennessee, 58. An insect suspiciously like a British B FLAT.