Barnaby (disambiguation)
WiktionaryText

Noun



  1. An old dance to a quick movement. See Cotton, in his Virgil Travesti; where, speaking of Eolus he has these lines,
    Bounce cry the port-holes, out they fly,
    And make the world dance Barnaby.

Proper noun



  1. , from the medieval vernacular form of Barnabas.

Quotations

  • 1595 Edmund Spenser, Epithalamium
    This day the sun is in his chiefest height
    With Barnaby the Bright.
  • 1848 John O'Donovan, The Annals of the Four Masters, The Dublin University Magazine, 1848, Vol.31, page 577
    The name Barnaby may strike the reader as out of place in so Celtic a pedigree; but this was an anglicisation of the true name, Brian Oge - - - Now, times are altered, and his anglicised descendants will probably begin to use Brian as a family name again, rejecting Barnaby as less respectable.
  • 1962 Edward Eager, Seven-Day Magic, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 1999, ISBN 0152020780, page 8
    Barnaby liked his own name. He was proud of its differentness and would never answer to "Barney", or any other nickname.
  • 2000 Alexei Sayle, Barcelona Plates
    But instead of pressing the button that would have taped the play she pressed the button that activated the built-in microphone and recorded a hundred and twenty minutes of hers and Barnaby's home life, which aurally consisted of 'Want a cup of tea?' 'No thanks.'
 
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