SCHOOL, or MOB, two or more “patterers” working together in the streets.
SCHOOLING, a low gambling party.
SCHWASSLE BOX, the street performance of Punch and Judy.—Household Words, No. 183.
SCONCE, the head, judgment, sense.—Dutch.
SCORE, “to run up a SCORE at a public house,” to obtain credit there until pay day, or a fixed time, when the debt must be WIPED OFF.
SCOT, a quantity of anything, a lot, a share.—Anglo Saxon, SCEAT, pronounced SHOT.
SCOT, temper, or passion,—from the irascible temperament of that nation; “oh! what a SCOT he was in,” i.e., what temper he showed,—especially if you allude to the following.
SCOTCH FIDDLE, the itch; “to play the SCOTCH FIDDLE,” to work the index finger of the right hand like a fiddlestick between the index and middle finger of the left. This provokes a Scotchmen in the highest degree, it implying that he is afflicted with the itch.
SCOTCH GRAYS, lice. Our northern neighbours are calumniously reported, from their living on oatmeal, to be peculiarly liable to cutaneous eruptions and parasites.
SCOTCHES, the legs; also synonymous with NOTCHES.