ale-bush

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English

Alternative forms

Noun

ale-bush (plural ale-bushes)

  1. (archaic) a tavern sign.
    • 1599, Henry Porter, “The Two Angry Women of Abingdon”, in Kind-heart's Dream: Containing Five Apparitions with Their Invectives, published 1841, page 102:
      for I might haue had a pumpe set vp with as good Marche beere as this was, and nere set vp an ale-bush for the matter.
    • 1902, James Henry Yoxall, The Rommany Stone, page 101:
      Copernicus grinned amorously at the ruddy stout damsel who stood, presenting arms akimbo, under the ale-bush in the latticed porch.
    • 2004, P. C. Doherty, The Hangman's Hymn: The Carpenter's Tale of Mystery and Murder, page 48:
      The place was really no more than a cottage, wattle-daubed walls and a thatched roof with an ale bush pushed under the eaves.

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