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word histories

“ad fontes!”

Category: media

‘gizza job’: a phrase of the mass-unemployment age

14th Oct 2019.Reading time 8 minutes.

‘give us a job’—UK, 1983—used by Yosser Hughes, a character in Boys from the Blackstuff (1982), a BBC TV drama series on the desperation bred by unemployment

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meaning and origin of the phrase ‘to light the (blue) touchpaper’

9th Oct 2019.Reading time 18 minutes.

UK, mid-1950s—to set a course of exciting or dramatic events in motion—refers to firework instructions such as ‘light the blue touchpaper and retire immediately’

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the birth of an American phrase: ‘Where’s the beef?’

6th Oct 2019.Reading time 12 minutes.

January 1984—from a television advertisement for the hamburger chain Wendy’s, in which an elderly lady demands where the beef is in a huge hamburger bun

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the birth of a British catchphrase: ‘mind my bike’

5th Oct 2019.Reading time 8 minutes.

February 1940—coined by the British actor Jack Warner in ‘Garrison Theatre’, a BBC radio comedy series devised to entertain World-War-II audiences

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notes on the British phrase ‘some mothers do have ’em’

24th Sep 2019.Reading time 10 minutes.

1941—expresses exasperation or derision at a clumsy, erratic or idiotic person—popularised by Jimmy Clitheroe in his radio programme The Clitheroe Kid (1958-72)

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meaning and origin of the term ‘(Dr.) Kevorkian’

13th Sep 2019.Reading time 9 minutes.

USA, 1990s—purveyor of doom, especially agent of death, force of suicide—refers to Jack Kevorkian (1928-2011), U.S. physician and advocate of assisted suicide

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meanings and history of ‘the usual suspects’

10th Sep 2019.Reading time 10 minutes.

USA, 1932—originally used of the impunity enjoyed by gangsters when one of them was murdered—therefore, did not originate in the 1942 film Casablanca

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meanings of the British phrase ‘blues and twos’

8th Sep 2019.Reading time 11 minutes.

UK, 1985—the blue flashing lights and two-tone siren used on an emergency vehicle when responding to an incident; by extension, the emergency services

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the phrase ‘the face that launched a thousand ships’

28th Aug 2019.Reading time 14 minutes.

an extremely beautiful woman—alludes to the description of Helen of Troy in Christopher Marlowe’s ‘Doctor Faustus’—has given rise to countless adaptations

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meaning and origin of ‘Fibber McGee’s (hall) closet’

25th Aug 2019.Reading time 14 minutes.

USA, 1942—used with reference to clutter, jumble, mess—alludes to the overstuffed closet in U.S. radio comedy series ‘Fibber McGee and Molly’ (1935 to 1956)

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