Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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Gentleman-ranker, thinks I, bog-Irish gentry, village school, seen inside Dublin Castle, no doubt, but no rhino for a commission.
Isabelle Estelle Bruno 2010
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Gentleman-ranker, thinks I, bog-Irish gentry, village school, seen inside Dublin Castle, no doubt, but no rhino for a commission.
Flashman And The Redskins Fraser, George MacDonald, 1925- 1982
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Gentleman-ranker, thinks I, bog-Irish gentry, village school, seen inside Dublin Castle, no doubt, but no rhino for a commission.
Flashman and The Redskins Fraser, George MacDonald, 1925- 1982
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But with the large detective sergeant who had accompanied Weston — a man with a marvellously brutal bog-Irish face which looked as if it had been carved out of soft stone and then unwisely exposed to the elements for a century or two — it must have been claustrophobic for those ten long minutes.
War Game Price, Anthony 1976
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When it was only the bog-Irish brutalizing each other, Ontario didn't much trouble to defend the rule of law and the authority of the state in Biddulph township.
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Daily Telegraph's Charles Spencer who wrote: "Complacent Cockneys get it in the neck just as much as amorous Frenchmen, bog-Irish peasants, Jewish anarchists and today's radicalised young Muslims who pay court to hate-filled preachers."
unknown title 2009
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But I’m not a cashiered ex-Indian Army drunk either, and Jake’s got a real, live, upwardly mobile mother instead of a dead aristocrat turned bog-Irish housemaid.
Absolute Friends Le Carre, John, 1931- 2003
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Carry On films and EastEnders, Bean tells the story of successive waves of immigration into the East End of London … In a neat framing device the play is presented as if it were a performance by the inmates of a present-day immigration centre as they wait to learn whether or not they can stay in Britain … But complacent Cockneys get it in the neck just as much as amorous Frenchmen, bog-Irish peasants, Jewish anarchists and today's radicalised young Muslims who pay court to hate-filled preachers.
unknown title 2009
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