May-day sweep
See also: May Day sweep
English
WOTD – 1 May 2012
Alternative forms
Etymology
May Day (workers' spring holiday) + sweep (shortening of chimney sweep)
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /meɪ deɪ swiːp/
Audio (AU) (file)
Noun
May-day sweep (plural May-day sweeps)
- (largely historical) One of the sweeps (chimney sweeps), clad in bright clothes and garlands and carrying a blackened broom, in a May Day parade.
- 1829, W. Brockedon, The Passes of the Alps, printed in The London Literary Gazette and Journal of Belles Lettres, page 345 :
- […] preceded by a drum and fife, and followed by the successful marksman, who, dressed out with flowers and ribands as fantastically as a May-day sweep in England, expressed his joy by dancing and pirouetting amidst his friends, who congratulated and cheered him.
- 1843, Punch, volume 5, page 158:
- Thanks to certain alchemic pens, which have touched even garbage to gold-paper, murder has been as fine, and withal as jocund among us, as a May-day sweep.
- 1876, Lady Barker, The Kafir at Home, printed in The Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art, volume 23 (87?), page 221 :
- […] but anything would have been better than sitting at table with a thing only fit for a May-day sweep on one's head.
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