‘corkscrew curl’: meaning and origin
UK, early 19th century—the noun ‘corkscrew’ is used as a modifier, with the sense spirally twisted, in the expressions ‘corkscrew curl’ and ‘corkscrew ringlet’
Read More“ad fontes!”
UK, early 19th century—the noun ‘corkscrew’ is used as a modifier, with the sense spirally twisted, in the expressions ‘corkscrew curl’ and ‘corkscrew ringlet’
Read MoreUK, 1851, as ‘haw-doovers’—humorous and colloquial alteration of ‘hors d’oeuvres’, plural of the noun ‘hors d’oeuvre’ (i.e.: an extra dish served as a relish to whet the appetite usually before the main meal)
Read MoreUK, 1951—in soccer: an overhead kick, typically executed with the feet off the ground and often involving a shot at goal
Read MoreLSD (i.e., lysergic acid diethylamide); also other drugs—USA, 1968—alludes to the Beatles’ song ‘Strawberry Fields Forever’ (1967)
Read Moreexceedingly or immeasurably old—Britain, 1762—perhaps alludes to the fact that a hill is a permanent feature of a particular landscape
Read MoreU.S. slang, 1979—a condom—based on the phonetic similarity between the two nouns that compose it
Read Morean uproariously funny joke—USA, 1941—the image is of a person slapping their knees in laughter
Read Morea day on which one has performed badly, especially at work; a day which has been unusually difficult or unsatisfactory—USA, 1895
Read Moreexcess or unwanted fat at the waist—USA, 1960 and 1964, in interviews of Debbie Reynolds—the image is of the waist being held on to during sexual intercourse
Read Moreto get caught doing something wrong, unauthorised or illegal—USA, 1933
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