‘Nessie’: meaning and origin
January 1934, in the Daily Record and Mail (Glasgow, Scotland)—composed of ‘Ness’ in ‘Loch Ness’ and the suffix ‘-ie’, used to form pet names
Read More“ad fontes!”
January 1934, in the Daily Record and Mail (Glasgow, Scotland)—composed of ‘Ness’ in ‘Loch Ness’ and the suffix ‘-ie’, used to form pet names
Read MoreUK, 1845—to celebrate the birth of a child by drinking alcohol
Read MoreUSA, 1826—a laugh by a person in a state of religious fervour—especially used in reference to Methodist camp-meetings
Read MoreUK, 1883—to stay at a hotel, inn, etc., that provides a bed for the night and breakfast the following morning—to stay at an establishment known as a ‘bed and breakfast’
Read MoreUSA, 1936—characteristic or reminiscent of the Left Bank (‘Rive Gauche’ in French), the part of Paris south of the River Seine, noted for its intellectual and artistic life
Read Moreinflammation of the bursa over the kneecap (prepatellar bursa), typically induced by kneeling on hard floors—UK, from 1824 onwards in medical publications
Read MoreUSA, 1851—a bowie-knife—apparently coined in relation to the California Gold Rush, which began in 1848
Read MoreAustralia & USA, 1850—a married woman whose husband has left to prospect for gold in California
Read Morechronic pharyngitis—first used in medical texts published in Philadelphia from 1837 onwards—in reference to preachers who overstrain their voice
Read MoreUK, 1881—a form of repetitive strain injury (first identified in tennis players) that affects the tendons of forearm muscles attached to the lateral epicondyle of the humerus—synonym ‘lateral epicondylitis’
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