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“ad fontes!”

Category: etymology

early meanings of the portmanteau ‘screenager’

28th Dec 2018.Reading time 6 minutes.

USA—blend of ‘screen’ and ‘teenager’—(1957) teenagers reacting to a movie—(1985) teenagers as represented by TV and cinema

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‘to know —— like the back of one’s hand’ – ‘connaître —— comme sa poche’

27th Dec 2018.Reading time 5 minutes.

first attested in David Balfour (1893), by Robert Louis Stevenson—French equivalent ‘connaître comme sa/ses poche(s)’ (‘to know like one’s pocket(s)’ – 1791)

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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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the coinage of an Irish political term: ‘whataboutery’

24th Dec 2018.Reading time 9 minutes.

1974—coined by the Irish journalist John Healy with reference to the Troubles in Northern Ireland

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origin and sense development of Anglo-Irish ‘bejesus’

23rd Dec 2018.Reading time 11 minutes.

1825, Anglo-Irish alteration of ‘by Jesus’—1867 as one word—‘the bejesus out of’ (1931) intensifies the action conveyed by the preceding verb

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origin of ‘beard the lion in his den’ (confront someone on their own ground)

20th Dec 2018.Reading time 10 minutes.

Scotland, 1749—from the idea of daring to grab a lion’s “beard” and figurative uses of ‘beard’: (verb) ‘confront’ – (noun) ‘face’

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‘I should cocoa’: meaning and origin

18th Dec 2018.Reading time 9 minutes.

UK slang, 1936—emphatic agreement, though often ironical—‘cocoa’ is said to be rhyming slang for ‘so’ in ‘I should say so’

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meaning and origin of the phrase ‘like the clappers’

16th Dec 2018.Reading time 7 minutes.

very fast, or very hard—UK, 1942, RAF slang—alludes to the moving metal piece within a bell, which strikes it and produces the sound

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meaning and origin of ‘belt and braces’–‘belt and suspenders’

13th Dec 2018.Reading time 11 minutes.

UK, 1948—USA, 1952—from the image of the over-cautious man who wears both a belt and braces/suspenders to hold up his trousers

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‘that’s how the cookie crumbles’ and ‘(that’s when) the cookie crumbled’

10th Dec 2018.Reading time 7 minutes.

USA, 1950s—‘that’s how the cookie crumbles’: that’s how it is—‘(that’s when) the cookie crumbled’: (that’s when) a decisive change in a situation occurred

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