Lexicographical Neighbors of Liblab
Literary usage of Liblab
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Glossary of Yorkshire Words and Phrases: Collected in Whitby and the by Francis Kildale Robinson (1855)
"All of a froth and liblab," as frothed cream. A LICK AND A SLAKE. See Slake.
LICKS, a beating. " Give him his licks." LIEF. See Leeve. LIEFER. See Leever. ..."
2. A Natural History of the British Lepidoptera: A Text-book for Students and by James William Tutt (1908)
"... near Beyrout it occurs in the hot moist valley of the Dog river ; abounding
on the terraces where " liblab " beans are plentiful ; it also occurs in the ..."
3. A glossary of Yorkshire words and phrases, collected in Whitby and the by Francis Kildale Robinson (1855)
"All of a froth and liblab," as frothed cream. A LICK AND A SLAKE. See Slake.
LICKS, a beating. " Give him his licks." LIEF. See Leeve. LIEFER. See Leever. ..."
4. A Glossary of the Cleveland Dialect: Explanatory, Derivative, and Critical by John Christopher Atkinson (1868)
"liblab, sb. The result of much beating or whipping, in the case of cream, or
trifle, &c. ; the smooth soft superstratum in such preparations. ..."