Reverse Dictionary: JILT

ADJECTIVES
► HANDLED jilted → 1964 US students’ sl. (Bk.)
► JAMPHING jilting, making false pretenses of courtship → Bk1902 Sc.

NOUNS
► BEGINK a befooling or deluding trick; a piece of deception; a cheat; a jilting → 1725 Sc.
► BEGOWK the act of jilting → 1814 Sc.
► BEGUNK the act of jilting → 1790 Sc.
► BLINK a jilting; ‘ the slip’ → Bk1911 Sc.
► BROWN HELMET bad or unfair treatment of a date; a jilting a boyfriend; any unpleasantness → 1970 US students’ sl. (Bk.)
► FLAT a lover’s dismissal; a jilting → Bk1893 Amer. sl.
► GUNK a disappointment; a jilt → 1807 Sc.
► JAMPHING the act of jilting or making false pretenses; applied to a male → Bk1902 Sc.

NOUNS – PERSON
► GILLET a giddy or flighty young woman; a jilt; sometimes a familiar or contemptuous term for a girl or young woman, a wench → 1755 Sc. 
► HADDICK a friend or lover discarded or jilted → Bk1997 Irish sl. 
► JAMPHER a male jilt → 1768 Sc.
► QUEER MORT a woman suffering from venereal disease; a dirty drab; a jilting wench → M17 UK criminals’ sl.
► SCOUFF a male jilt; a low scoundrel → 1898 Sc.

VERBS
► AIR to dismiss, to jilt  → 1910 US sl.
► BAG to jilt → 1791 Sc. & Eng. dial.
► BEGECK to befool; to disappoint; to gull; to deceive; to jilt → a1513 obs. exc. Sc.
► BEGINK to cheat; to jilt → Bk1911 Sc.
► BEGOUK ► BEGOWK to trick, to befool; to jilt → 1862 Sc.
► BEGUNK to delude, to play a deceiving trick on, to ‘take in’; to cheat, do deceive; to jilt→ 1821 Sc.
► BELIRT vb. to deceive, to beguile, to cheat, to befool; to jilt → c950 obs. exc. Sc.
► BLINK to jilt; to deceive → Bk1911 Sc.
► BOUNCE to jilt; to dismiss someone → 1893 Amer. dial.
► CAN to get rid of, to expel, to discharge, to eject, to jilt, to dismiss; to discharge from employment → 1905 Amer. sl.
► CHUCK OVER to abandon, to dismiss, to throw over, to jilt → 1879 UK sl.
► DEFROST to jilt → Bk1947 Amer. sl.
► FIRE to reject, to jilt a person → 1941 Amer. dial.
► FLAT to jilt → 1871 sl.
► FLING to jilt, to reject → 1894 Amer. dial.
► FLUFF ► FLUFF OFF to snub, to jilt, to shun → 1946 Amer. dial.
► GET THE MITTEN to be refused as a lover; to be jilted → 1844 Amer. dial.
► GIVE ONE THE BASKET to jilt → 1940 Amer. dial.
► GIVE ONE THE BOUNCE ► GIVE THE BOUNCE to jilt or dismiss someone → 1912 Amer. dial.
► GIVE ONE THE DITCH to jilt or dismiss one → 1969 Amer. dial.
► GIVE ONE THE GRAND BOUNCE to jilt or dismiss someone → 1894 Amer. dial.
► GIVE ONE THE MITTEN of a woman: to reject or dismiss a man’s invitation or proposal of marriage; to jilt → 1842 Amer. dial.
► GIVE THE BAG to jilt or reject a suitor → 1798 Amer. sl.
► GIVE THE CHUCK-UP to abandon, to stop an action, to dismiss, to throw over, to jilt → 1923 UK sl.
► GIVE THE FLUFF to jilt → Bk1947 Amer. sl.
► GIVE THE FULLER to jilt → Bk1947 Amer. sl.
► JAMPH to shuffle, to make false pretenses; to act the part of a male jilt → Bk1902 Sc.
► JILFER to jilt → 1966 Amer. dial.
► KICK to reject or jilt a suitor; to turn someone down → 1809 Amer. dial.
► KICK OUT to reject or jilt a suitor; to turn someone down → 1941 Amer. dial.
► K.O. to jilt; ‘kiss off’ → Bk1947 Amer. sl.
► LAY DOWN to jilt someone → c1955 Amer. dial.
► MITTEN to reject or dismiss a man’s invitation or proposal of marriage; to jilt → 1873 Amer. dial.
► RENEAGUE to withdraw from an engagement; to jilt; to refuse; to deny → 1790 Sc. & Eng. dial.
► SACK to jilt someone → 1841 UK sl.
► SCONCE ► SCONCE A WOMAN to jilt a woman → 1825 Sc.
► SHOOT DOWN IN FLAMES to jilt → Bk1947 Amer. sl.
► TAKE THE LACK to be slighted, jilted; used of a lover when he departs suddenly → Bk1902 Eng. dial.
► THROW IN THE AIR to jilt → 1897 Amer. sl.
► TOSS IN THE AIR to jilt → 1896 Amer. sl.