- After getting a bit drunk, closes one eye ... child’s play! - Child’s game - Child’s play involving tiny facial expressions - Counters flicking game - Counters-flicking game - Flicking game - Game using plastic counters
- Deserted, left in the ... - Move unsteadily - Pitch suddenly - Slur cheaters who hold pitch, suddenly - Stagger - Stagger like Addams’ butler? - Sudden lunge
- A waterbird - Farm bird - Honking bird - Honking birds - Large water bird - Large water birds - Any large web-footen bird of the subfamily Anserinae, and
belonging to Anser, Branta, Chen, and several allied genera. See
Anseres.
- Cured or smoked ham - The buttock or thigh of a hog, salted and smoked or dried;
the lower end of a flitch. - To make bacon of; to salt and dry in smoke. - Backgammon. - An imposition or hoax; humbug. - To beat in the game of backgammon, before an antagonist
has been able to get his "men" or counters home and withdraw any of
them from the board; as, to gammon a person. - To impose on; to hoax; to cajole.
- A Moorish dance, usually performed by a single dancer, who
accompanies the dance with castanets. - A dance formerly common in England, often performed in
pagenats, processions, and May games. The dancers, grotesquely dressed
and ornamented, took the parts of Robin Hood, Maidmarian, and other
fictious characters. - An old game played with counters, or men, which are placed
angles of a figure drawn on a board or on the ground; also, the board
or ground on which the game is played. - A marine fish having a very slender, flat, transparent
body. It is now generally believed to be the young of the conger eel or
some allied fish.
- A game, called also daughts, played on a checkerboard by
two persons, each having twelve men (counters or checkers) which are
moved diagonally. The game is ended when either of the players has lost
all his men, or can not move them.