Rum-ville

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English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From rum (good, fine, excellent) +‎ -ville (town, city).

Proper noun

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Rum-ville

  1. (archaic, British, thieves' cant) London, England.
    • 1861, Lady Esther Hope, The Blue Dwarf, page 21:
      "And said if we'd meet him at the boozing-ken with the dell and kinchin co, he'd carry them off to Rum-ville," continued the first speaker.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Rum-ville.

References

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