subs. (old).—‘A slovenly, dirty, nasty Fellow’ (B. E. and GROSE). Also SLABBERDEGULLION. As adj. = paltry, dirty.

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  1647.  BEAUMONT and FLETCHER, The Custom of the Country, i., 1.

          Rut.  Yes, they are knit. But must this SLUBBERDEGULLION
Have her maidenhead now?

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  1630.  TAYLOR (‘The Water Poet’), Workes, Laugh and be Fat, 73. Contaminous, pestiferous, preposterous, stygmatical, slauonians, SLUBBERDEGULLIONS.

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  1653.  URQUHART, Rabelais, I. xxv. Calling them … slapsauce fellows, SLABBERDEGULLION druggels, lubbardly louts, &c.

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  1656.  Musarum Deliciæ, 79. He’s an oxe and an asse, and a SLUBBERDEGULLION.

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  1663.  BUTLER, Hudibras, I. iii. 885.

                        Thou hast deserved,
Base SLUBBERDEGULLION, to be served
As thou didst vow to deal with me.

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