Word of the Day: LADYKIN

ETYMOLOGY
from lady + -kin

EXAMPLE
“… .In the time of Ieremie the land mourned for oathes, in our time it is to be wondred, that the land sinkes not to hell under the burden of this sinne: there is hardly one of an hundred that makes conscience of all oathes: they haue pettie oathes (as they account them) and coyne strange Gods to sweare by, the Masse, Ladikin, or Lakin, and much like grosse profanenesse they continually use without feare or wit: yet is cursing as ordinary as swearing, and drunkrnnesse comes not behind any of them, how generall it is, and how it hath, and doth infect, witnesse the ruine of many families, the pining and leane cheekes of many wiues and children, and the loathsome stinke of it in every corner. ..”

From: The Way to Blessednes a Treatise or Commentary, on the First Psalme
By Phineas Fletcher, 1632

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