Wet Finger (With a),

easily, directly. “Dʹun tour de main.” The allusion is to the old custom of spinning, in which the spinner constantly wetted the forefinger with the mouth.

“I can bring myself round with a wet finger.”—Sir W. Scott: Redgauntlet, chap. xxiii. (and in many other places).


“The spirit being grieved and provoked… . will not return again with a wet finger.”—Gouge: Whole Armour of God, p. 458 (1616).


“I can find


Ono with a wet finger that is stark blind.”


Trial of Love and Fortune (1598).


Flores. “Canst thou bring me thither?

Peasant. With a wet finger.”


Wisdom of Dr. Dodypoll (1600).

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Entry taken from Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, edited by the Rev. E. Cobham Brewer, LL.D. and revised in 1895.

Welsher
Wench (A)
Werner
Werther
Werwolf (French, loup-garou)
Wesleyan
Wessex, or West Saxon Kingdom
Westmoreland [Land of the West Moors]
Wet
Wet-bob and Dry-bob
Wet Finger (With a)
Wetherell (Elizabeth)
Wexford Bridge Massacre
Weyd-monat
Whale
Whale
Whalebone
Wharncliffe
Wharton
What we Gave we Have, What we Spent we Had, What we Had we Lost
What’s What

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Finger. (Anglo-Saxon, finger)