| The Taw or Shooter, is the marble used for shooting. |
| The Taw Line or Tie Line, or Scratch, as it is often called,
is the line drawn for a starting-point in games like the Long Ring. |
| Ducks are the marbles to be shot at. |
| Dubs (an abbreviation of doubles) means that you take all the
marbles knocked out of the ring by one shot. |
| Fen Dubs (an abbreviation of defend doubles) means that you
must put back all but one marble. |
| Lofting means shooting through the air. When you loft you
knuckle down and your taw goes through the air and does not strike the ground until it
hits the duck aimed at, or a spot near it. |
| Knuckling down means what the name implies, resting the
knuckles on the ground during the act of shooting. |
| Hunching means shoving your hand over the mark as you shoot.
Hunching is unfair, and if a good shot is made and the player making it is caught in the
act of hunching he should be made to shoot over again and shoot fair. |
| Histing is holding the hand some distance above the ground.
Histing is not allowable in the Bull Ring or in Meg-on-a-String. |
| Roundsters means taking a new position on one side or the
other of some obstruction. This is not fair in Bull Ring. |
| Sidings means to move your taw from one side to the other in a
straight line when about to shoot, and is not allowable in Bull Ring. |
| Burying is the term applied to the act of placing your taw in
a good spot and then forcing it into the ground with the heel of your shoe. Burying is
sometimes allowed in all games of marbles, but only by unskilled players; with the others
"Fen buryings" is the unwritten rule of the game. |
| Laying in is similar to burying, with the exception that your
taw is left on top of the ground. This is also a "baby" game and not often
resorted to. "Laying in" also means placing the marbles in the ring. |
| Clearances means removing stones, sticks, or other objects
between your taw and the ducks. |
| Sneaking is the act of shooting for a position. |
| Babying is shooting with little force, so as not to knock the
ducks far or to cause your taw to fly far. Babying is not of much use in large rings, but
is often resorted to in small rings and in such games as Follerings. There is no rule that
can make you stop babying, so the other players always try ridicule. This never succeeds
to any extent, though it eases the minds of the unsuccessful players when another boy is
"skinning" the ring by babying. |
| Playing for Keeps is a game in which all the ducks won are
kept. Playing for Fair is an Eastern term with the same meaning, and for Fun means of
course that all the marble are returned to their original owners when the game is over. |