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“ad fontes!”

Category: Australia & New Zealand

meaning and origin of the phrase ‘Dunkirk spirit’

16th Apr 2019.Reading time 6 minutes.

1940 as ‘spirit of Dunkirk’—determination to endure hardship—refers to the evacuation of the British Expeditionary Force from Dunkirk in May/June 1940

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meaning and origin of the phrase ‘all-singing, all-dancing’

12th Mar 2019.Reading time 7 minutes.

UK, 1959—having every desirable feature possible—from ‘all-singing, all-dancing’ as used in the billing given to film or stage musical productions

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meaning and evolution of ‘had one but the wheel(s) came off’

26th Feb 2019.Reading time 11 minutes.

UK, 1924—used to indicate that the speaker has been inattentive or has not understood what has just been said

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meaning and origin of the phrase ‘the silly season’

17th Feb 2019.Reading time 12 minutes.

coined in The Saturday Review (London, 13 July 1861) about the shortage of important news in autumn in The Times of London

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the emergence of the political term ‘whataboutism’ in 1978

25th Dec 2018.Reading time 7 minutes.

The Guardian, UK, 23 May 1978—used by one Lionel Bloch to designate—and denounce—the rhetoric employed by the advocates of the communist regimes

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meaning and origin of the phrase ‘tall poppy’

12th Nov 2018.Reading time 17 minutes.

UK, 1816—successful person attracting envious hostility—from Tarquin’s decapitation of the tallest poppies to indicate the fate of enemies

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origin of the phrase ‘been there, done that (and got the T-shirt)’

12th Oct 2018.Reading time 8 minutes.

Australia, 1980—seems to have originated in a 1979 tribute song to the Australian cricketer and cricket commentator Alan McGilvray

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meaning and origin of ‘Matthew effect’ and of ‘Matthew principle’

2nd Oct 2018.Reading time 16 minutes.

USA, 1960s—those who already have will receive more—refers to gospel of Matthew—coined by sociologist Robert King Merton

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origin of the Irish-English phrase ‘up the pole’ (‘pregnant’)

16th Jul 2018.Reading time 13 minutes.

probably refers to pregnancy as an awkward condition, the image being apparently of an uncomfortable position at the top of a pole

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origin of ‘Bananaland’, colloquial Australian name for Queensland

9th Jul 2018.Reading time 7 minutes.

Australia, 1880—from the fact that bananas grow in abundance in Queensland (a state comprising the north-eastern part of Australia)

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