Part 154 (1/2)
Fr _chandelier_, a branch for holding candles, used obliquely
Grose mentions _chaundler_
~Chanler-Chafted~, _adj_ Lantern-jawed; having chops like a _chandler_ or candlestick, S B
_Journal Lond_
CHANNEL, _s_ Gravel, S (synon _chad_) perhaps from _channel_, the bed of a river
V ~Chingle~
~Channelly~, _adj_ Gravelly, S
_Statist Acc_
_To_ CHANNER, _v n_ To fret, to be in a chiding humour, S
_Minstrelsy Border_
CHANOS, _adj_ Gray
V ~Canois~
_Douglas_
CHANTERIS, _s pl_ Laics endoith ecclesiastical benefices
_Bannatyne Poems_
CHAP, _s_
1 A fellow; a contemptuous term; sometimes _chappie_, or ”little _chap_,” S
_Burns_
2 Like _chield_, it is also applied to a female, S B
_Ross_
Su G _kaeps_, _keips_, _kaebs_, homo servilis conditionis
_To_ CHAP, _v a_
1 To strike with a hammer, or any instrument of similar use, S
Teut _kapp-en_, incidere; Belg _schopp-en_, to strike, Sewel