or lollypop, subs. (colloquial).—1.  A sweetmeat. Also LOLLY.

1

  1823.  GROSE, A Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue, 3rd ed., s.v.

2

  1835.  C. SELBY, Catching an Heiress, sc. 4.

        With ginger beer,
Our hearts we cheer,
With LOLLYPOPS,
We treat our chops.

3

  1844.  B. DISRAELI, Coningsby, I. ix. The … hopeless votary of LOLLYPOP—the opium eater of schoolboys.

4

  1851–61.  H. MAYHEW, London Labour and the London Poor, i. 215. Hard-bake, almond-toffy, halfpenny LOLLYPOPS.

5

  1861.  THACKERAY, Lovel the Widower, i. I would … never give these children LOLLYPOP.

6

  1876.  C. HINDLEY, ed. The Life and Adventures of a Cheap Jack, p. 101. William Carrol was his partner, or ‘butty,’ in the ‘LOLLIPOP’ business.

7

  1885.  G. A. SALA, in Daily Telegraph, 3 Sept., 5/5. From a perambulator to a packet of LOLLIES or sugarplums.

8

  2.  (venery).—The penis. Also Ladies’ Lollipop. For synonyms, see CREAMSTICK and PRICK.

9