grub street

  • 11Grub Street (literary magazine) — Grub Street is Towson University s arts and literary magazine. Every year, they feature the writings and artwork of Towson students and others in the community; it s free and available at many locations on campus.The magazine is named after Grub… …

    Wikipedia

  • 12Grub Street (disambiguation) — Grub Street was an area of London known for down market literary activity, and now refers to such activity.Grub Street may also refer to: * Grub Street (literary magazine), from Towson University, Maryland, USA *Grub Street, Staffordshire, a… …

    Wikipedia

  • 13Grub Street Journal — Published from 1730 to 1737, The Grub Street Journal was a satire on popular journalism and hack writing as it was conducted in Grub Street in London. It was largely edited by Richard Russel and the botanist John Martyn. Alexander Pope was one of …

    Wikipedia

  • 14Grub Street — noun the world or class of impoverished journalists and writers. Origin the name of a street (later Milton Street) in London inhabited by such writers in the 17th cent …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 15GRUB STREET —    a street in London near Moorfields, formerly inhabited by a needy class of jobbing literary men, and the birthplace of inferior literary productions …

    The Nuttall Encyclopaedia

  • 16Grub Street — Дешёвое издание посредственной литературы (происходит от названия лондонской улицы XVII XVIII вв., на которой жили бедные писатели) …

    Краткий толковый словарь по полиграфии

  • 17New Grub Street —   Author(s) George Gissing …

    Wikipedia

  • 18Murder in Grub Street — Blind Justice   Author(s) Bruce Alexander Country …

    Wikipedia

  • 19Bell Inn, Grub Street —    See Bell Alley1, Grub Street …

    Dictionary of London

  • 20Grub — Grub, n. 1. (Zo[ o]l.) The larva of an insect, especially of a beetle; called also {grubworm}. See Illust. of {Goldsmith beetle}, under {Goldsmith}. [1913 Webster] Yet your butterfly was a grub. Shak. [1913 Webster] 2. A short, thick man; a dwarf …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English