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 to be found in the ordinary gaming-rooms. A man who persuades another to buy an article on which he receives commission or percentage, is said to bonnet or bear-up for the seller. Also called a bonneter. The French has bonneteur for one profuse in compliments and bows.

1812. J. H. Vaux, Flash Dictionary. Bonnet, a concealment.

1841. Comic Almanack, October. Or a man at a hell, Playing the part of a bonnetter well.

1853. Whyte Melville, Digby Grand, ch. xxi. I began to think my military friend was 'a bonnet,'—one of those harpies employed by gambling-house keepers to enhance temptation by the influence of example, and generally selected for their respectable and innocent appearance.

(?) 1868. Times (quoted by Brewer, Phrase and Fable, p. 104). A man who sits at a gaming-table, and appears to be playing against the table; when a stranger appears, the bonnet generally wins.

1876. Hindley, Life and Adventures of a Cheap Jack, p. 217. We bid or praised up his goods: in fact, often acted as 'puffers' or bonnets, to give him a leg up.

1885. Morning Post, Sept. 5, p. 7, col. 3. There was no distinct evidence to connect him with a conspiracy to defraud. He might have been used as a sort of bonnet to conceal the utter worthlessness of propositions made by the others.

2. (old.)—A pretex; pretence; or 'make believe.'

3. A woman. [This sense is analogous to 'petticoat,' the names of articles of feminine attire being transferred to the wearer.]

1880. Punch's Almanac, p. 3. Then comes Easter, Got some coin in hand, Trot a bonnet out and do the grand.

Verb (common).—1. To act as a bonnet (q.v.); to cheat; to puff; to 'bear up' (q.v.).

1871. 'Hawk's-Eye,' Budget of Turf Notes, p. 2. I could point out now what horses he is bonneting for the 2,000 Guineas and Derby of this year, and the horses whose pretensions he is trying to discredit.

1887. Referee, 15 May, p. 1, col. 3. Nobody can suppose that I am anxious to bonnet for the Times newspaper.

2. (popular.)—To crush a man's hat down over his eyes.

1835. Dickens, Sketches by Box, p. 229. Two young men, who, now and then, varied their amusements by bonneting the proprietor of this itinerant coffee-house.

1836. Dickens, Pickwick, II., p. 216. You are a dutiful and affectionate little boy to come a bonnetin' your father in his old age.

1843. Dickens, Christmas Carol in Prose, p. 22. Scrooge reverently disclaimed any knowledge of having wilfully bonneted the Spirit at any period of his life.

1882. Saturday Review, LIV., p. 629. The students hustled and 'bonnetted' a new professor.

To have a green bonnet, phr. (common).—To fail in business. [From the green cloth cap formerly worn by bankrupts.]

Bonnet-Builder, subs. (popular).—A milliner. [The derivation is clear.]—See Build.

1839. Song in The Little Melodist, quoted in J. Ashton's The Fleet, p. 93. Will you go to Bagnigge Wells, Bonnet builder, O!

1868. Brewer, Phrase and Fable, s.v. 'Build.' A milliner is jestingly called a 'bonnet-builder.'

Bonneter.—1. See Bonnet, subs., sense 1.

2. (common.)—A crushing blow on the hat.—See Bonnet, verb, sense 2.

Bonnets So Blue, subs. (rhyming slang).—Irish stew.—See Rhyming slang.