lacquey
English
Noun
lacquey (plural lacqueys)
- Archaic form of lackey.
- 1884, John Ruskin, “By the Rivers of Waters”, in “Our Fathers Have Told Us.”: Sketches of the History of Christendom for Boys and Girls who have been Held at Its Fonts, part I (The Bible of Amiens), Orpington, Kent: George Allen, →OCLC, pages 30–31:
- St. Martin [of Tours] looks round, first, deliberately;—becomes aware of a tatterdemalion and thirsty-looking soul of a beggar at his chair side, who has managed to get his cup filled somehow, also—by a charitable lacquey. St. Martin turns his back on the Empress, and hobnobs with him!
Verb
lacquey (third-person singular simple present lacqueys, present participle lacqueying, simple past and past participle lacqueyed)
- Archaic form of lackey.
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