adj. (old).—Strong—applied to drink; brisk—applied to trade; hard—applied to blows. HUMMING OCTOBER = the specially strong brew from the new season’s hops; STINGO (q.v.).

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  c. 1696.  B. E., A New Dictionary of the Canting Crew. HUMMING Liquor, Double Ale, Stout, Pharoah.

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  1701.  FARQUHAR, Sir Harry Wildair, iv., 2. The wine was HUMMING strong.

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  1733.  FIELDING, Don Quixote, iii., 4. Landlord, how fares it? You seem to drive a HUMMING trade here.

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  1821.  P. EGAN, Tom and Jerry, ch. vii. Let us fortify our stomachs with a slice or two of hung beef, and a horn or so of HUMMING stingo.

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  1822.  SCOTT, The Fortunes of Nigel, ch. xxiii. A HUMMING double pot of ale.

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  1837.  R. H. BARHAM, The Ingoldsby Legends. ‘The Wedding Day.’

                        A mighty magnificent tub
Of what men, in our hemisphere, term ‘HUMMING Bub,’
But which gods,—who, it seems, use a different lingo,
From mortals,—are wont to denominate ‘Stingo.’

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  1864.  DICKENS, Our Mutual Friend, bk. III., ch. vii. Wegg, in coming to the ground, had received a HUMMING knock on the back of his devoted head.

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