This is another tricky charade-style riddle taken from A Choice Collection of Riddles, Charades [and] Rebusses published in London in 1796.
Like all the puzzles in this book—which are attributed to a mystery author known only as “Peter Puzzlewell”—this riddle breaks the answer word into two component syllables, then gives a rhyming clue to each, and then to the answer word as a whole. This is a clever and decidedly cryptic style of puzzle, and not all of them are as solvable today as others (solutions elsewhere in this collection include the likes of sackbut, an Indiaman ship, and a muffbox). But the answer here is thankfully a familiar everyday word. Can you work it out?
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