<span class="searchmatch">wit</span>-<span class="searchmatch">crackers</span> plural of <span class="searchmatch">wit</span>-cracker...
witcracker <span class="searchmatch">wit</span>-cracker (plural <span class="searchmatch">wit</span>-<span class="searchmatch">crackers</span>) (obsolete) One who makes jests; a joker. 1598–1599 (first performance), William Shakespeare, “Much Adoe about...
asserts that it was applied due to Georgia and Florida settlers (Florida <span class="searchmatch">crackers</span>) who cracked loud whips to drive herds of cattle, or, alternatively, from...
perhaps Beaumont and Fletcher or Thomas Middleton and William Rowley?, <span class="searchmatch">Wit</span> at Several Weapons, act 3, scene 1, page 44: Sir Gregory. I promise you,...
of their dearest rizts; until: Exhausting its glow-worm taper in squibs <span class="searchmatch">crackers</span> buffoonery & bombast is now set: In eternal oblivion! " 1906 November,...
these biscuits biscuits. They always referred to them reverently as ‘cream <span class="searchmatch">crackers</span>’—‘Have another cream cracker, Mr Reilly. You’ll like a cream cracker with...