Used as a derisive title for a sluggard.Apparently an isolated use.
ΚΠ
1634 W. WoodNew Englands Prospectii. ix. 95 They [i. the Indian wives] must dresse it and..see it eaten over their shoulders; and their loggerships [sc. the husbands] having filled their paunches, their sweete lullabies scramble for their scrappes.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1903; most recently modified version published online September 2019).