subs. (old).—1.  A blockhead. Also adj.

1

  1534.  UDALL, Roister Doister, iii. 3. Such a calfe, such an asse, such a blocke … such a LOBCOCKE.

2

  1567.  BRETON, The Forte of Fancie [GROSART (1876), i. a. 15, 2, 37].

        The LOBCOKE Lust, from thriftlesse thick,
  both bring thē in his lap.

3

  1567.  EDWARDS, Damon and Pithias [DODSLEY, Old Plays, 1874, iv. 75]. In faith, ere you go, I will make you a LOB-COCK.

4

  1575.  GASCOIGNE, Supposes, ii. 3 [HAZLITT (1869), Poems, i. 218]. I will stand here aside and laugh a little at this LOBCOCKE.

5

  1594.  NASHE, The Unfortunate Traveller [GROSART (1883–4) v. 157]. Seneca and Lucan were LOBCOCKES to choose that death.

6

  1606.  Wily Beguiled [DODSLEY, Old Plays, 1874, ix. 241]. Your lubberly legs would not carry your LOB-COCK body.

7

  c. 1696.  B. E., A New Dictionary of the Canting Crew, s.v.

8

  1719.  D’URFEY, Wit and Mirth; or Pills to Purge Melancholy, iv. 171.

        That ev’ry LOBCOCK hath his Wench,
  And we but one betwixt us.

9

  1785.  GROSE, A Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue, s.v.

10

  2.  (venery).—A large relaxed penis.—GROSE (1785).

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