(Only the first 100 entries are shown)
> Found: 2843 entries
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> 1. A (1888) Kipling Plain Tales fr. Hills 10 ``The A.-D.-C. in
> Waiting. ''
> 2. aasvogel (1903) Kipling Five Nations 94 ``Well the keen
> aas-vogels know it. ''
> 3. abdominal (1932) Kipling Limits &. Renewals 358 ``It was the
> trephining work that had stuck on his mental retina. (Odd! It
> used to be abdominals with me.)''
> 4. ab initio (1937) Kipling Something of Myself viii. 207, ``I
> found that when, to save trouble, I `wrote short' ab initio
> much salt went out of the work. ''
> 5. aboard (1905) Kipling Actions &. Reactions (1909) 112 ``Our
> coach will lock on when..the clerks are aboard. ''
> 6. above (1890) Kipling From Sea to Sea (1899) I. 455, ``I
> have..seen more decent men above or below themselves with
> drink, than I care to think about. ''
> 7. abrim (1896) Kipling Seven Seas 114 ``Weed ye trample
> underfoot Floods his heart abrim. ''
> 8. absolutely(1929) Kipling Limits &. Renewals (1932) 367 ```Did
> it cure him?' I asked..`Ab-so-bally-lutely,' said Keede. ''
> 9. abusefully(1914) Kipling Divers. of Creatures (1917) 53
> ``Talkin' most abusefully.''
> 10. accommodat(1909) Kipling Actions &. Reactions 36 ``No better
> than accommodation-roads. ''
> 11. across (1913) Kipling Diversity of Creatures (1917) 190 ``Tell
> a fellow now, did I get it across? ''
> 12. action (1892) Kipling Barrack-r. Ballads 37 ``But 'e swung 'is
> 'orses 'andsome when it came to `Action Front!' ''
> 13. active (1899) Kipling Absent-Minded Beggar i, ``He is out on
> active service, wiping something off a slate. ''
> 14. adjective (1888) Kipling Soldiers Three (ed. 3, 1889) 66
> ``They..slept until it was cool enough to go out with their
> `towny', whose vocabulary contained less than six hundred
> words, and the Adjective. ''
> 15. adjustment(1904) Kipling Traffics &. Discov. 251 ``The
> Adjustment Committee-the umpires of the Military Areas. ''
> 16. admiralty (1893) Kipling `Song of the English' in Eng.
> Illustr. Mag. May 535 ``If blood be the price of admiralty Good
> God, we ha' paid in full! ''
> 17. aeroplane (1923) Kipling Irish Guards in Gt. War I. 50
> ```Aeroplane duty' was another invention of those early days. A
> Company was told off daily to look out for aeroplanes. ''
> 18. Afridi (1923) Kipling Land &. Sea Tales 4 ``The little
> hillsman of the North-east Indian Frontier, Afreedi, Pathan,
> Biluch. ''
> 19. Afridi (1932) Kipling Limits &. Renewals 209 ``He was a
> hard-bitten Afridi from the Khaiber hills.''
> 20. after- (1898) Kipling in Morning Post 11 Nov. 5/1 ``An
> Admiral..goes up on the after-bridge. ''
> 21. age (1923) Kipling Irish Guards in Gt. War I. 325 ``That
> *age-ago retreat from Mons. ''
> 22. age (1913) Kipling Songs from Books 157 ``*Age-encamped
> Oblivion Tenteth every light that shone! ''
> 23. air (1923) Kipling Irish Guards in Gt. War I. p. x, ``There
> was hardly an operation in which platoons..brigades, or
> divisions were not left with one or both flanks in the air.''
> 24. air (1923) Kipling Irish Guards in Gt. War I. 30 ``Artillery
> fire, directed by air observation. ''
> 25. air (1923) Kipling Irish Guards in Gt. War I. 57 ``The days of
> the merciless air-patrols had yet to come. ''
> 26. air (1926) Kipling Debits &. Credits 359 ``He Who bids the
> wild-swans' host still maintain their flight on Air-roads over
> islands lost. ''
> 27. air-line (1888) Kipling In Black &. White 66 ``The Religion
> never seemed to get much beyond its first manifestations;
> though it added an air-line postal dak, and orchestral
> effects.''
> 28. Aladdin (1884) R. Kipling in Civil &. Mil. Gaz. 22 Mar. 3/3
> ``With the vivid sunlight streaming in upon thousands of
> rainbow-coloured glass drops,..it seemed as unreal as Alladin's
> Cave. ''
> 29. allowance (1888) Kipling Plain Tales fr. Hills, False Dawn 40
> ``Pay and allowances of nearly fourteen hundred rupees a month.
> ''
> 30. allus (1890) Kipling Barrack-Room Ballads (1892) 15, ``I bring
> a lock of 'air that 'e allus used to wear, An' you'd best go
> look for a new love. ''
> 31. along (1906) Kipling Puck of Pook's Hill 252 ``A present from
> the Gentlemen, along o' being good! ''
> 32. amateur (1903) Kipling Five Nations 194 ``'Ow we're sugared
> about by the old men ('Eavy-sterned amateur old men!) That
> 'amper an' 'inder an' scold men. ''
> 33. American (1889) Kipling From Sea to Sea (1899) xvii. 368 ``The
> American I have heard up to the present, is a tongue as
> distinct from English as Patagonian. ''
> 34. amoral (1917) Kipling Divers. Creatures 176 ``He's the
> Absolutely Amoral Soul. I've never met one yet. ''
> 35. ancient (1937) Kipling Something of Myself i. 10, ``I was
> shown an Ancient of Days who, I was told, was the Provost of
> Oriel.''
> 36. ancientry (1913) Kipling Songs from Books 21 ``Witness hereby
> the ancientry Of Oak and Ash and Thorn! ''
> 37. Andalusian(1924) Kipling Debits &. Credits (1926) 229 ``The
> fifth bull rushed out-an unthinking black Andalusian. ''
> 38. anecdotard(1937) Kipling Something of Myself v. 145
> ``Americans are too much anecdotards; the French too much
> orators for this light-handed game.''
> 39. anfractuou(1932) Kipling Limits &. Renewals 140 ``If they've
> been hoicked out of bed, ad hoc, they're apt to be
> anfractuous.''
> 40. angekok (1895) Kipling 2nd Jungle Bk. 147 ``The angekok, the
> sorcerer, frightened them into the most delightful fits.''
> 41. Anglo-Saxo(1888) Kipling in Lett. of Marque (1891) xvi. 119
> ``A snowy-bearded chowkidar..threw himself into Anglo-Saxon
> attitudes. ''
> 42. Anglo-vern(1888) Kipling Plain Tales fr. Hills 269 ``He wound
> up with a six-shot Anglo-Vernacular oath. ''
> 43. ankus (1895) Kipling 2nd Jungle Bk. 128 ``It was a two-foot
> ankus, or elephant-goad-something like a small boat-hook. ''
> 44. any (1918) Kipling Land &. Sea Tales (1923) vii. 116 ``They
> tried to get into touch with the natives... But the natives
> weren't havin' any. They took to the bush. ''
> 45. any (1890) Kipling in Harper's Wkly. 22 Nov. 911/1 ``You don't
> want being made more drunk any. ''
> 46. apicultura(1914) Kipling Diversity of Creatures (1917) 392
> ``Apicultural exhibitions. ''
> 47. Argentine (1901) Kipling Five Nations (1903) 163 ``Atop of a
> sore-backed Argentine.''
> 48. Armageddon(1896) Kipling England's Answer in Poems (1919) I.
> 237 ``In the day of Armageddon, or the last great fight of all.
> ''
> 49. arride (1937) Kipling Something of Myself iv. 92 ``My normal
> output seemed to have the gift of arriding per se the very
> people I most disliked.''
> 50. ash (1901) Kipling Five Nations (1903) 113 ``Opal and
> ash-of-roses, Cinnamon, umber, and dun. ''
> 51. ash (1901) Kipling Kim i. 4 ``Then there were holy men,
> ash-smeared faquirs by their brick shrines. ''
> 52. ash (1905) Kipling Actions &. Reactions (1909) 6 ``That
> wilderness which is reached from an ash-barrel of a station
> called Charing Cross. ''
> 53. ash (1898) Kipling Fleet in Being 5, ``I heard Swinburne
> laying down the law to his juniors by the ash-shoot. ''
> 54. ash (1887) Kipling Plain Tales fr. Hills (1890) 116 ``He had
> tipped a bagful of his powder into the big silver *ash-tray. ''
> 55. ask (1887) Kipling Plain Tales fr. Hills (1890) 199 ``Now and
> again he was asked out to dinner. ''
> 56. ass (1899) Kipling Stalky vii. 196 ``Don't mind learnin' my
> drill, but I'm not goin' to ass about the country with a toy
> Snider. ''
> 57. assembly (1923) Kipling Irish Guards I. 324 ``The Battalion
> moved nearer their assembly-areas.''
> 58. Atkins (1892) Kipling Barrack-r. Ballads 6 ``Oh it's Tommy
> this, an' Tommy that, an' `Tommy, go away'; But it's `Thank
> you, Mister Atkins', when the band begins to play. ''
> 59. Atlantic (1895) Kipling Devil &. Deep Sea in Day's Work (1898)
> 141 ``Her crew signed and signed again with the regularity of
> Atlantic liner boatswains.''
> 60. attack (1923) Kipling Irish Guards II. 179 ``The Companies
> dressed in attack-order. ''
> 61. attention (1892) Kipling &. Balestier Naulahka 259 ``A
> trooper..stood to attention at the horse's head. ''
> 62. attract (1891) Kipling Light that Failed vii. 135 ```Do they
> [sc. the students] still steal colours at lunch-time?' `Not
> steal Attract is the word... I'm good-I only attract
> ultramarine; but there are students who'd attract flake-white.'
> ''
> 63. aunt (1888) Kipling Story of Gadsbys (1889) 66 ``Prince Kraft
> a stable-boy-Oh, my Aunt! ''
> 64. auto-da-fe(1917) Kipling Diversity of Creatures 148
> ``Evidently this was their established auto-da-f&eacu.. ''
> 65. babul (1884) Kipling Departm. Ditties (ed. 2, 1886) 51 ``In
> place of Putney's golden gorse The sickly babul blooms. ''
> 66. bacco (1906) Kipling Puck of Pook's Hill 251 ``Five and twenty
> ponies, Trotting through the dark-Brandy for the Parson, 'Baccy
> for the Clerk. ''
> 67. back (1890) Kipling Life's Handicap (1891) I. 48 ``Your flanks
> are unprotected for two miles. I think we've broken the back of
> this division. ''
> 68. back (1923) Kipling Irish Guards I. p. vii, ``The farthest
> back-areas where the enemy aeroplanes harried their camps. ''
> 69. back- (1923) Kipling Irish Guards in Great War I. 88 ``Our
> shrapnel, which had no back-blast. ''
> 70. back-fire (1902) Kipling Traffics &. Discoveries (1904) 184
> ``That car..back-fired superbly. ''
> 71. back-front(1900) Kipling in Times 15 Mar. 8/1 ``The home
> Government..maintain intimate relations with all sides, with
> the front, and the far more important `back-front' which begins
> at Pretoria.''
> 72. back numbe(1902) Kipling Traffics &. Discoveries (1904) 12
> ``These old hand-power, back-number, flint-and-steel reaping
> machines.''
> 73. back-talk (1899) Kipling Stalky 204 ``I've heard more
> back-talk since this volunteerin' nonsense began than I've
> heard in a year in the service. ''
> 74. backward (1896) Kipling Seven Seas 57 ``Hedged in a
> backward-gazing world. ''
> 75. bad (1899) Kipling Stalky 220 ```Not half bad years, either,'
> said M`Turk. ''
> 76. baggage (1891) Kipling Light that Failed xiv. 301 ``Cabin as
> close to the baggage-hatch as possible. ''
> 77. bags I (1899) Kipling Stalky 35 ``There's a Monte Cristo in
> that lower shelf. I saw it. Bags I, next time we go to Aves! ''
> 78. bait (1899) Kipling Stalky &. Co. 152 ```What a bait you're
> in!' said Stalky. ''
> 79. bait (1899) Kipling Stalky &. Co. 205, ``I got in no end of a
> bait. ''
> 80. balky (1897) Kipling Capt. Cour. vii. 147 ``Young Olley's
> gittin' kinder baulky an' excited. ''
> 81. ball-room (1911) Kipling Big Steamers in Fletcher &. Kipling
> Hist. England xii. 236 ``Oh, the Channel's as bright as a
> ball-room already. ''
> 82. ballyhoo o(1897) Kipling Capt. Cour. iii. 69 ``Tom Platt, this
> bally-hoo's not the Ohio. ''
> 83. ballyhoo o(1897) Kipling Capt. Cour. ix. 205 ``Oh, ef it had
> bin even the Fish C'mmission boat instid o' this bally-hoo
> o'blazes. ''
> 84. bamboo (1889) Kipling From Sea to Sea (1899) I. xi. 303
> ``After the bamboo-shoots came..white beans in sweet sauce. ''
> 85. band (1890) Kipling Barrack-r. Ballads (1892) 6 ``It's `Thank
> you, Mister Atkins', when the band begins to play. ''
> 86. bandar (1885) Kipling Dep. Ditties (1899) 54 ``It was an
> artless Bandar, and he danced upon a pine. ''
> 87. bandar (1894) Kipling 2nd Jungle Bk. (1895) 63 ``Men are
> blood-brothers of the Bandar-log. ''
> 88. banzai (1932) Kipling Limits &. Renewals 199 ``That's how it
> was till the Squadron returned... The banzai-parties came
> ashore, all hats and hosannas like a tax-payers' treat.''
> 89. bar (1902) Kipling Captive in Traffics &. Discoveries (1904) 8
> ``Take away his hair and his gun and he'd make a first-class
> Schenectady bar-keep. ''
> 90. barasingha(1894) Kipling 2nd Jungle Bk. (1895) 37 ``The
> barasingh, that big deer which is like our red deer, but
> stronger. ''
> 91. barge (1904) Kipling Traffics &. Discov. 318 ``You ought to
> have summoned me for trespass when I barged through your woods.
> ''
> 92. barge (1904) Kipling in Windsor Mag. Jan. 234/2, ``I
> remember..the dropped jaw of the midshipman in her whaler when
> we barged fairly into him. ''
> 93. barley (1901) Kipling Kim xiv. 367 ``A drink of chang-the
> *barley-beer that comes from Ladakh-way. ''
> 94. barn dance(1898) Kipling Fleet in Being 7 ``We of the light
> horse did barn-dances about the windy floors.''
> 95. barrack (1892) Kipling (title) ``Barrack-room ballads and
> other verses. ''
> 96. barrack (1901) Kipling Kim vi. 143 ``Spreading his cloth in
> the shade of a deserted barrack-wing. ''
> 97. bat (1911) Fletcher &. Kipling Hist. England i. 9, ``I
> remember the bat-winged lizard birds. ''
> 98. bat (1887) Kipling 3 Musketeers in Plain Tales (1888) 62 ``T'
> Sahib doesn't speak t' bat. ''
> 99. bat (1889) Kipling Barrack-r. Ballads (1892) 67 ``An' ow they
> would admire for to hear us sling the bat. ''
> 100. battle (1898) Kipling Fleet in Being ii. 17 ``That a cruiser
> at 7.30 that morning had reported to the Battle Fleet..`Enemy
> to the Westward'. ''