Page:Farmer - Slang and its analogues past and present - Volume 5.pdf/227

 or house for swindling or robbery; (3) to utter base coin; (4) in mining, to salt (q.v.); (5) to humbug, to gammon (q.v.); and (6) to prepare cards for unfair play. Also in plant = in hiding; TO spring a plant = to unearth.—B. E. (c. 1696); Grose (1785); Vaux (1819); Matsell (1859). Hence (conjurors') = to prepare a trick by depositing an object in charge of a conscious or unconscious confederate.

1610. Rowlands, Martin Mark-all, E4. To plant, to hide.

1612. Dekker, O per se O [Farmer, Musa Pedestris (1896), 12]. When they did seeke, then we did creepe, and plant in ruffe-mans low.

c. 1819. Song, 'The Young Prig' [Farmer, Musa Pedestris (1896), 82. I have a sweet eye for a plant.

1838. Dickens, Oliver Twist, xxxix. 'I was away from London a week and more, my dear, on a plant,' replied the Jew.

1853. Reade, Gold, iv. 1. Levi. This dust is from Birmingham, and neither Australian nor natural. Rob. The man planted it for you.

d. 1870. Dickens [quoted in Century]. It wasn't a bad plant, that of mine, on Filey, the man accused of forging the Sou' Western Railway Debentures.

1886-96. Marshall, 'Pomes' from the Pink 'Un ['Honest Bill'], 50. For plants he always hated, 'cept the plants upon his sill.

1889. Notes and Queries, 7 S. ix. 50. Such-and-such an author says that so-and-so was 'burnt alive,' followed by righteous indignation at what never happened, while the dispassionate scholar finds the whole thing a plant.

1892. Percy Clarke, New Chum in Australia, 72. A salted claim, a pit sold for a £10 note, in which a nugget worth a few shillings had before been planted.

5. (old).—In pl. = the feet.

Verb. (thieves').—1. See subs. 1.

2. (old : now mostly colloquial).—To post, set, or fix in position.

1555. Cavendish, Wolsey [Oliphant]. [He plants himself near the King.]

1600. Jonson, Cynthia's Revels, ii. 1. Plant yourself there, sir: and observe me.

1602. Shakspeare, Twelfth Night, ii. 3. I will plant you two, and let the fool make a third, where he shall find the letter.

1837. Barham, Ingoldsby Legends, i. 148. He planted himself with a firm foot in front of the image.

3. (old).—To bury.—Grose (1785).

1872. Clemens ('Mark Twain'), Innocents at Home, 20. 'Now, if we can get you to help plant him—.' 'Preach the funeral discourse?'

4. (footballers').—To drive the ball into another player: hence planter = a blow so given: specifically one delivered in the face.

5. (venery).—To achieve (or assist) intromission; also to plant a man (old) = to copulate: see Greens and Ride.

To plant whids and stow them, verb. phr. (old).—To be wary of speech.—B. E. (c. 1696); Grose (1785).

1610. Rowlands, Maunders Wooing [Farmer, Musa Pedestris (1806), 8]. Stow your whids & plant, and whid no more of that.

To plant home, verb. phr. (common).—(1) To deliver (as a blow); (2) to make a point (as in argument); and (3, general) to succeed.

1886. Phil. Times, 6 May. Cleary planted two rib-roasters.

1899. Daily Telegraph, 7 Ap., 8, 3. See over there! Opposition in the crowd. That roar means the opposition's planted one 'ome.