someone (normally a Ladie ) would go along in the street and take any washing of any washing lines and then put the clothes into her basket
A crooked basket
A bawdy basket was a women who carried a basket around filled with clothes, and when she found any cloths out to dry, she would take them and put them in her basket. If anyone saw her, she would claim the clothes were her own, and carry on walking.
a Bawdy Basket :D
People in Elizabeth I reign who would steal and sell books and pins
Bawdy. "She sang bawdy songs, such as 'A Lusty Young Smith,' to the enjoyment of all."
Bawdy means vulgar or lewd, humorously coarse. Here are some sentences.I think that play is a little too bawdy for my mother to see.He told a bawdy joke.Her taste is very bawdy compared to mine.
The kids were sent to bed because of our bawdy jokes.
A bawdy house is a historical term for a brothel or house of prostitution.
A bawdy-house bottle is an obsolete term for a very small bottle.
The Bawdy Adventures of Tom Jones was created in 1976.
It was a very bawdy town, with trash scattered on the ground and dirty buildings
A bawdy baskets beggar is a term historically used to describe a type of street performer or beggar who would use humor, particularly lewd or risqué jokes, to entertain and solicit money from passersby. This figure often carried a basket, likely containing items to aid in their performances or to collect alms. The bawdy nature of their act would typically appeal to a more adult audience, blending elements of comedy and social commentary. Such characters were common in certain historical periods and settings, particularly in urban environments.