MAX, gin; MAX-UPON TICK, gin obtained upon credit.
M. B. COAT, i.e., Mark of the Beast, a name given to the long surtout worn by the clergy,—a modern Puritan form of abuse, said to have been accidentally disclosed to a Tractarian customer by a tailor’s orders to his foreman.
MEALY-MOUTHED, plausible, deceitful.
MEDICAL GREEK, the slang used by medical students at the hospitals. At the London University they have a way of disguising English, described by Albert Smith as the Gower-street Dialect, which consists in transposing the initials of words, e.g., “poke a smipe”—smoke a pipe, “flutter-by”—butterfly, &c. This disagreeable nonsense is often termed MARROWSKYING.—See [GREEK], St. Giles’ Greek, or the “Ægidiac” dialect, Language of ZIPH, &c.
MENAGERY, the orchestra of a theatre.—Theatrical.
MIDDY, abbreviation of MIDSHIPMAN.—Naval.
MIDGE NET, a lady’s veil.
MIKE, to loiter; or, as a costermonger defined it, to “lazy about.” The term probably originated at St. Giles’, which used to be thronged with Irish labourers (Mike being so common a term with them as to become a generic appellation for Irishmen with the vulgar) who used to loiter about the Pound, and lean against the public-houses in the “Dials” waiting for hire.
MILKY ONES, white linen rags.
MILL, a fight, or SET TO. Ancient cant, MYLL, to rob.