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jack-in-the-green
noun
- (in England, formerly) a man who wore or supported a leaf-covered wooden framework while dancing in May-Day celebrations
Example Sentences
The boys would awaken the Jack-in-the-Green - a seven-foot character - at dawn on Blue Bell Hill, Chatham before parading through Rochester, Kent, collecting money.
Other more recent revivals include Jack-in-the-Green in Hastings, East Sussex, which was reinstated by Mad Jack’s Morris Dancers in the 1980s.
Mrs Bray had sailed and rustled into the room in a tremendously stiff green brocade dress, to be complimented by her lord as resembling a laurel hedge, and by her son for her May-day aspect and Jack-in-the-green look.
Why, you're covered with laurel, boy, like Jack-in-the-Green.
She moved away across the lawn, her skirt brushing it audibly, as the cage-borne skirt of those days did, suggesting the advantages of Jack-in-the-Green's costume.
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