| E. Cobham Brewer 18101897. Dictionary of Phrase and Fable. 1898. |
| | | Fagot. | | |
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A badge worn in mediæval times by those who had recanted their heretical opinions. It was designed to show what they merited, but had narrowly escaped. (See FAGOTS.) | 1 |
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Il y a fagots et fagots. There are divers sorts of fagots; every alike is not the same. The expression is in Molières Le Médecin malgré lui, where Sganarelle wants to show that his fagots are better than those of other persons; Ay, but those fagots are not so good as my fagots. (Welsh, ffag, that which unites; Anglo-Saxon, fgan, to unite.) | 2 |
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Sentire les fagots. To be heretical; to smack of the fagots. In allusion to the custom of burning heretics by surrounding them with blazing fagots. | 3 |
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