subs. (old).—1.  A medley; a jumble; a chaos of differences. [Fr., gallimaufrêe = a hash.]

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  1592.  NASHE, Pierce Penilesse, His Supplication to the Divell, in wks., ii., 93. Coblers, Tinkers, Fencers, none escapt them, but they mingled them all on one GALLIMAFREY of glory.

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  1592.  JOHN DAY, The Blind Beggar of Bednal Green, Act iv., Sc. 1, p. 75. Can. Let me be torn into mammocks with wilde Bears if I make not a GALLEMAUFRY of thy heart and keep thy Skull for my quaffing bowl.

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  1604.  SHAKESPEARE, Winter’s Tale, Act iv., Sc. 4. And they have a dance which the wenches say is a GALLIMAUFRY of gambols, because they are not in’t.

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  1690.  D’URFEY, Collin’s Walk through London and Westminster, canto ii., p. 58.

        But like thy Tribe of canting Widgeons,
A GALLIMAUFRY of Religions.

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  1781.  G. PARKER, A View of Society, i., 207. A compound of Player, Soldier, Stroller, Sailor, and Tinker! An odd GALLIMAUFRY!

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  1860.  HALIBURTON (‘Sam Slick’), The Season Ticket, No. 7. This portion of my journal, which includes a variety of topics and anecdotes, some substantial like solid meat, some savoury as spicy vegetable ingredients, and some fragments to swell the bulk, which, though not valuable as materials, help to compound the GALLIMAUFRY.

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  2.  (old).—A hodge-podge of scraps and leavings.

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  1724.  E. COLES, English Dictionary; 1728. BAILEY, English Dictionary; 1785. GROSE, A Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue; 1811. Lexicon Balatronicum.

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  3.  A mistress.

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  1596.  SHAKESPEARE, Merry Wives of Windsor, ii. 1. He loves thy GALLYMAWFRY; Ford, perpend.

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  4.  (venery).—The female pudendum. For synonyms, see MONOSYLLABLE.

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