slipthrift
English
Etymology
Noun
slipthrift (plural slipthrifts)
- (obsolete) A spendthrift.
- 1866 February 1, “Preaching and Young Preachers”, in The British Harbinger, volume 19, page 47:
- Especially must I guard my young preaching brother against imitating the studied carelessness and slipthrift manner of a certain type of dandies.
- (obsolete) A gambling game that was invented in the early 1500s, similar to shuffleboard but played with coins on a board, and which was more commonly called shovegroat.
- 1579, Richard Rice, Invective:
- What to dooe there? To bowle, or to plaie at dise, or cardes, penipricke, or slipthrift.
- 1852, G. Willis, Willis's Current Notes:
- Shovegroat or slidegroat, slideboard, slidethrift, or slipthrift, are sports occasionally mentioned by writers of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and, acccording to Strutt, were probably analogous to the modern pastime called Justice Jervis, which is confined to common pot-houses, and only practised by such as frequent tap-rooms.