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To BONE,

to apprehend, sieze, take or arrest. I'll Bone ye; I'll cause you to be arrested. We shall be Boned, we shall be apprehended for the Robbery. The Cove is Boned and gone to the Whit; the Rogue is taken up and carried to Newgate. The Cull has Boned the Fen (for Fence) or Bloss that bit the Blow, The Man has taken the Thief that robbed his House or Shop, or picked his Pocket. If he be Boned he must shove the Tumbler; If he be taken he'll be whipt at the Gart's-tail. I have Boned her Dudds, Fagged and Brushed; I have taken away my Mistress's cloaths, beat her and am trooped off. Boning the Fence; Finding the Goods where concealed and siezing them. He made no Bones of it.

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ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ

Entry taken from 1736 Canting Dictionary, by Nathan Bailey.

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BOB-TAIL
BOG-LANDERS
BOB-TROTTERS
BOLTER of White Fryars
BOLTSPRIT
To BONE
BONNY-CLAPPER
BOOTH
To Play BOOTY
BOOZE
BORDE

Nearby:

The Vulgar Tongue originally collected by Grose, 1811.

Also see examples in Canting Songs and Slang Rhymes collected by John S. Farmer (1896).