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Collection last updated: Apr 6 2024
Engine last updated: Feb 18 2024
Finnegans Wake lines: 36
Elucidations found: 131

082.01to one and oppositely from the other on its law of capture and
082.01+(action and reaction)
082.02recapture), under the All In rules around the booksafe, fighting
082.02+phrase all in: (of wrestling) without restrictions
082.02+booksafe: a large fire-proof and thief-proof safe for holding books and documents (especially a business's account books) [.24]
082.03like purple top and tipperuhry Swede, (Secremented Servious of
082.03+VI.B.16.084g (b): 'all purple top swede'
082.03+Connacht Tribune 26 Apr 1924, 6/6: (Advertisement) 'T. NAUGHTON'S Carefully Selected and Tested SEEDS... Best of All Purple Top Swede'
082.03+Purple Top, Tipperary Swede: types of turnip [517.05]
082.03+German Uhr: clock
082.03+segmented
082.03+sacrament
082.03+servant
082.03+saviour
082.04the Divine Zeal!) and in the course of their tussle the toller man,
082.04+James Toller: 19th century English 'giant', said to be eight-and-a-half feet tall
082.04+toller: one who collects tolls; one who tolls bells (Obsolete inciter, instigator)
082.04+German toller: more crazy, more insane
082.04+Danish taler: speaker
082.04+taller man [.13] [062.28] [522.08]
082.04+(tallness fits *E*; instigating fits *Y*)
082.05who had opened his bully bowl to beg, said to the miner who
082.05+Obsolete bull beggar: bogey, bugbear, dreaded monster, terrifying person
082.05+Billy-in-the-Bowl: legless beggar and strangler in old Dublin [.09] [.29] [135.13]
082.05+VI.B.15.040r (o): 'minor'
082.05+(living in a mine fits *E*; being a minor fits *Y*)
082.06was carrying the worm (a handy term for the portable distillery
082.06+worm: spiral condenser used for whiskey distilling
082.07which consisted of three vats, two jars and several bottles though
082.07+Motif: 2&3
082.08we purposely say nothing of the stiff, both parties having an
082.08+Slang stiff: money; corpse
082.08+stuff
082.09interest in the spirits): Let me go, Pautheen! I hardly knew ye.
082.09+Pat
082.09+Anglo-Irish potheen: illicit whiskey
082.09+song Johnny I Hardly Knew Ye (about a soldier who lost his legs, arms and eyes in a war, and can do nothing but beg in a bowl) [.05]
082.09+new (Motif: new/same) [.10]
082.10Later on, after the solstitial pause for refleshmeant, the same
082.10+(major Celtic festivals were held on the solstices)
082.10+Coca-Cola advertisement: 'Pause for refreshment' (from the 1930s, or perhaps even earlier)
082.10+flesh, meat
082.11man (or a different and younger him of the same ham) asked in
082.11+
082.12the vermicular with a very oggly chew-chin-grin: Was six vic-
082.12+VI.B.6.091b (b): 'vermicular'
082.12+Jespersen: The Growth and Structure of the English Language 134 (sec. 131): 'It is... surprising how many pairs we have of native nouns and foreign adjectives, e.g.... worm: vermicular' [.06]
082.12+vernacular
082.12+ugly
082.12+(Chinese Pidgin)
082.12+six pounds fifteen shillings (i.e. 135 shillings) [070.02] [.27] [086.30] [568.13]
082.12+statutes enacted during Queen Victoria's reign are cited using a form similar to '55 & 56 Vict c 10', where the first pair of numbers represent the year of the statute, counting from Victoria's coronation in 1837, and the last number is a running number within the year (e.g. "5 & 6 Vict c 15" was "Duties on Spirits, etc. Act 1842", "6 & 7 Vict c 15" was "Slave Trade Treaties with Bolivia, Texas, Uruguay Act 1843") [495.31]
082.13tolios fifteen pigeon takee offa you, tell he me, stlongfella, by
082.13+pidgin
082.13+taken off
082.13+Offa: 8th century king of Mercia
082.13+VI.B.14.230o (o): 'Tell he me = Lei' (Italian Lei: you)
082.13+Evans: My People, Stories of the Peasantry of West Wales 55: 'The Way of the Earth': 'Tell he me, when shall I say to Beca thus: 'On such and such a day is the wedding'? Say him a month this day?' (i.e. addressing one's better in the third person)
082.13+VI.B.14.157f (o): 'strongfella = molto'
082.13+Beach-la-Mar strong fella: strong, strongly (used as a general intensive)
082.13+The Long Fellow: an epithet of De Valera (for being uncommonly tall; Colloquial long fellow: tall man) [.04]
082.14picky-pocky ten to foul months behindaside? There were some
082.14+pick-pocketing
082.14+foulmouth: a person who uses obscene language [081.26-.27]
082.14+four
082.14+(ago)
082.14+hindside
082.15further collidabanter and severe tries to convert for the best part
082.15+Latin collidebantur: (they) were brought into collision
082.15+collide and banter
082.15+several
082.15+in rugby, a try (grounding the ball in the opposition's goal area) leads to a potential conversion (attempt to kick at the goal)
082.15+converse
082.16of an hour and now a woden affair in the shape of a webley (we
082.16+VI.B.6.064k (b): 'Woden'
082.16+Jespersen: The Growth and Structure of the English Language 62 (sec. 60): (quoting from J.R. Green's A Short History of the English People) 'England still remained England; the conquerors sank quietly into the mass of those around them; and Woden yielded without a struggle to Christ'
082.16+Woden: the chief Anglo-Saxon god (the equivalent of the Norse Odin)
082.16+wooden
082.16+Webley: a make of pistol
082.17at once recognise our old friend Ned of so many illortemporate
082.17+Latin phrase in illo tempore: at that time (a common biblical formula, also used for introducing gospel passages in the Mass (prayer))
082.17+ill-tempered
082.17+intemperate
082.18letters) fell from the intruser who, as stuck as that cat to that
082.18+intruder
082.18+in the crypt of Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin, are the skeletons of a cat and of a rat that it chased behind the organ pipes; both got stuck in the tubes and died of starvation [.18-.19] [.23]
082.19mouse in that tube of that christchurch organ, (did the imnage of
082.19+image
082.20Girl Cloud Pensive flout above them light young charm, in
082.20+float
082.20+like
082.20+Thomas Moore: Irish Melodies: song Believe Me, If All Those Endearing Young Charms
082.21ribbons and pigtail?) whereupon became friendly and, saying not
082.21+Variants: {FnF: ...not,... (i.e. comma)} | {Vkg, Png: ...not... (i.e. no comma)}
082.22his shirt to tear, to know wanted, joking and knobkerries all
082.22+Variants: {FnF, Vkg, JCM: ...his shirt to tear, to know wanted, joking and knobkerries all aside laying, if...} | {Png: ...to tear his shirt, wanted to know, laying all joking and knobkerries aside, if...}
082.22+(German word order)
082.23aside laying, if his change companion who stuck still to the in-
082.23+chance companion
082.23+strange
082.23+still stuck [.18]
082.23+phrase stock still: still like a stock, motionless
082.23+VI.B.14.216d (o): 'invention of fender' (Motif: fender)
082.24vention of his strongbox, with a tenacity corrobberating their
082.24+VI.B.15.057a (o): 'Amory Tristram with Strongbow' (only last two words crayoned)
082.24+Chart: The Story of Dublin 342: (of Armoricus (Amory) Tristram and Strongbow) 'Amory Tristram, one of the Norman adventurers, who followed Strongbow'
082.24+Strongbow is buried in Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin [.19]
082.24+strongbox: a small safe for documents or valuables [.02]
082.24+strong box: forceful blow
082.24+corroborating
082.24+robber
082.25mutual tenitorial rights, happened to have the loots change of
082.25+Italian tenitore: holder, keeper
082.25+territorial
082.25+have loose change of a ten-pound (note) [.33-.34]
082.25+loot: goods plundered, robbed or otherwise seized illegally
082.26a tenpound crickler about him at the moment, addling that hap
082.26+adding
082.26+VI.B.14.230n (o): 'hap = if'
082.26+Evans: My People, Stories of the Peasantry of West Wales 53: 'The Way of the Earth': 'Hap Madlen Tybach need coal?' (from Welsh hap: chance, luck, fortune)
082.27so, he would pay him back the six vics odd, do you see, out of
082.27+(the sum pickpocketed, namely six pounds and an odd number of shillings) [.12-.14]
082.27+Colloquial Old Vic: Royal Victoria Theatre, London
082.27+weeks old
082.28that for what was taken on the man of samples last Yuni or Yuly,
082.28+Genesis 2:23: (of the creation of Eve from Adam's rib) 'she shall be called Woman, because she was taken out of Man'
082.28+Man of Sorrows: an epithet of Christ as the Messiah (from Isaiah 53:3)
082.28+(travelling salesman)
082.28+German Juni, Juli: June, July
082.28+Archaic Yule: Christmas [070.03] [.36]
082.29do you follow me, Capn? To this the other, Billi with the Boule,
082.29+Colloquial cap'n: captain
082.29+Billy-in-the-Bowl: legless beggar and strangler in old Dublin [.05] [135.13]
082.29+billie [.32]
082.29+French boule: ball
082.30who had mummed and mauled up to that (for he was hesitency
082.30+German maulen: to mope, to sulk
082.30+mulled
082.30+HCE (Motif: HCE)
082.30+Parnell: hesitency
082.31carried to excelcism) rather amusedly replied: Woowoo would
082.31+to extreme
082.31+VI.B.14.064l (o): 'Rather amusedly'
082.31+The Leader 2 Aug 1924, 619/1: 'The Humours of Musical Criticism': 'Rather amusedly, we are forced to ask at this point'
082.31+(Motif: stuttering)
082.31+song Would You Be Surprised to Hear? (comic song based on phrase frequently used by Sir John Coleridge in cross-examining the Tichborne claimant in 1872; Joyce: Ulysses.16.1120 and Joyce: Ulysses.16.1343)
082.32you be grossly surprised, Hill, to learn that, as it so happens, I
082.32+greatly
082.32+American hill-billie: a boorish person from a rural area; a type of American music (now called country music) [.29] [.34]
082.33honestly have not such a thing as the loo, as the least chance of
082.33+have no loose change of a ten-pound (note) [.25-.26]
082.34a tinpanned crackler anywhere about me at the present moho-
082.34+tin-pan: (of noise or music) discordant and unpleasant, as if produced by beating on tin pans (American Colloquial Tin Pan Alley: the American popular music industry centred around 28th Street in New York City) [.32]
082.34+tin-canned
082.34+cracker
082.34+Slang crackle: a banknote (of five pounds or more)
082.34+(Motif: stuttering)
082.34+Mohammed
082.34+moment
082.35moment but I believe I can see my way, as you suggest, it
082.35+
082.36being Yuletide or Yuddanfest and as it's mad nuts, son, for you
082.36+Archaic Yuletide: Christmas season [.28]
082.36+German Judenfest: Jewish holiday
082.36+mad: crazy, insane (Colloquial angry) [082.36-083.02]
082.36+Slang nuts: mad, crazy, insane
082.36+children's game Nuts in May [083.01]
082.36+Nazi [083.01]
082.36+Sunday [083.01]


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