| E. Cobham Brewer 18101897. Dictionary of Phrase and Fable. 1898. |
| | | Cockney. | | |
|
One born within sound of Bow-bells, London; one possessing London peculiarities of speech, etc.; one wholly ignorant of country sports, country life, farm animals, plants, and so on. | 1 |
|
Camden says the Thames was once called the Cockney. | 2 |
|
The word has been spelt Cockeney, Cockaneys, Cocknell, etc. Cocknell would be a little cock. Puer in deliciis matris nutritus, Anglice, a kokenay, a pampered child. Niais means a nestling, as faucon niais, and if this is the last syllable of Cockney, it confirms the idea that the word means an enfant gâté. | 3 |
|
Wedgwood suggests cocker, (to fondle), and says a cockerney or cockney is one pampered by city indulgence, in contradistinction to rustics hardened by outdoor work. (Dutch, kokkeler, to pamper; French, coqueliner, to dangle.) | 4 |
|
Chambers in his Journal derives the word from a French poem of the thirteenth century, called The Land of Cocagne, where the houses were made of barley-sugar and cakes, the streets
paved with pastry, and the shops supplied goods without requiring money in payment. The French, at a very early period, called the English cocagne men, i.e. bons vivants (beef and pudding men). | 5 |
| |
Cry to it, nuncle, as the cockney did to the eels, when she put them into the paste alive.Shakespeare: Lear, ii. 4. |
|
|
The king of cockneys. A master of the revels chosen by students of Lincolns Inn on Childermas Day (Dec. 28th). | 6 |
| |

| |  |
|
|