LECCER (a)
Slang or colloquial alteration of “lecture”. Compton Macjkenzie, Sinister Street, 1914: “And you won’t come out to watch people buying copies on their way to leccers?”
CUNABLES (c)
A cradle. Adaptation of the Latin cunabula. 1547: “King Henry the Sixth, being in his cunables, and an infant.”
KANJAR (b)
A generic term for ceretain small gypsy communities which wander about India. 1931: “All Kanjars, however, are not criminals; many are poor and fairly respectable hunters and shikaris.”