or property, subs. (theatrical).1. Generally in pl.: e.g., MANAGERS-PROPS = stuff for stage use; ACTORS-PROPS = acting material provided by himself. Fr. accessoires.
c. 1594. Taming of a Shrew. [Old Play, Act i., p. 164].
My lord, we must | |
Have a shoulder of mutton, for a PROPERTIE. |
1596. SHAKESPEARE, Merry Wives of Windsor, iv. 4. Go get us PROPERTIES and trickings for our fairies.
1845. Punch, ix. 60.
Well covered in | |
With a lot of PROPERTY snow. |
1871. Standard, 8 Sept., The Campaign. Officers are buying the PROPERTIES necessarycamp beds, canteens, and pocket-flasks are at a premium.
1883. Referee, 6 May, 3, 2. The Theatre Royal scenery and PROPS were sold by auction.
1893. MILLIKEN, Arry Ballads, 78. Names and metres is any ones PROPS; but one thing they dont ave the ang.
2. (thieves).A breast-pin: whence PROP-NAILER (see quot. 1856).
1857. DICKENS, Reprinted Pieces (Three Detective Anecdotes, The Artful Touch). In his shirt-front theres a beautiful diamond PROP.
1856. H. MAYHEW, The Great World of London, 46. Those who plunder by stealth, as PROP-NAILERS, who steal pins or brooches.
1863. The Singular Story of a Lancashire Thief, 8. Lucky Middlesexs best was, of how he had nailed a diamond-PROP only the week before.
1879. J. W. HORSLEY, Autobiography of a Thief, in Macmillans Magazine, XL., 506. Pipe his spark PROP.
1888. G. R. SIMS, A Plank Bed Ballad [Referee, 12 Feb., 3].
And a spark PROP a pal (a good screwsman) and I | |
Had touched for in working two dead uns. |
1891. The Sporting Times, 11 April. But he is proudest of all of the pin, set with diamonds and rubies, presented to him by the Heir to the Throne John was wearing this PROP in the Paddock at Epsom.
3. (pugilistic).A straight hit: see WIPE.
1887. Licensed Victuallers Gazette, 2 Dec., 358/3. Ned met each rush of his enemy with straight PROPS.
4. (Punch and Judy).The gallows.
5. (common).In pl. = the legs.
1891. The Sportsman, 20 April. There are those amongst his detractors who assert that with such PROPS he will never successfully negociate the Epsom gradients.
6. (common).In pl. = crutches.GROSE (1785).
7. (theatrical).See quot: also PROPSTER.
1889. New York Tribune, 14 July. The property-man, or, as he is always called, PROPS for short.
8. (common).In pl. = the arms.
1869. Temple Bar, xxvi. 74. Take off your coat and put up your PROPS to him.
Verb. (pugilists).To hit; to knock down. Hence, TO PUT THE PROP ON = to seize an adversarys arm, and so prevent him from hitting.
1851. H. MAYHEW, London Labour and the London Poor, III. 397. If we met an old bloke (man) we PROPPED him.
1853. REV. E. BRADLEY (Cuthbert Bede), The Adventures of Mr. Verdant Green, an Oxford Freshman. His whole person put in Chancery, slung, bruised, fibbed, PROPPED, fiddled, slogged, and otherwise ill-treated.
1887. Licensed Victuallers Gazette, 2 Dec., 358/3. Ned stopped Smiths blows neatly, and PROPPED his man right and left as he came in.
1892. National Observer, 27 Feb., p. 378. Give me a snug little set-to down in Whitechapel: Nobody there that can PROP you in the eye!
TO KICK AWAY THE PROP, verb. phr. (old).To be hanged: see LADDER.