the curious history of the word ‘gazette’

In A Dictionarie of the French and English Tongues (1611), Randle Cotgrave gave the following definition of the French word gazette: A certaine Venetian coyne scarce worth our farthing; also, a Bill of Newes; or, a short Relation of the generall occurrences of the Time, forged most commonly at Venice, and thence dispersed, euery month, into most parts of Christendome. […]

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origin of ‘back to the drawing board’

MEANING   The phrase back to the drawing board is used to indicate that an idea, scheme or proposal has been unsuccessful and that a new one must be devised.   ORIGIN   This phrase originated in a cartoon by the U.S. cartoonist Peter Arno (Curtis Arnoux Peters, Jr – 1904-68), published in The New […]

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origin of the word ‘Brexit’

  MEANING   Brexit: the departure of the United Kingdom from the European Union   ORIGIN   A blend of British, or Britain, and exit, this term dates back to 2012. The form Brixit appeared in Bagehot’s notebook on British politics, in The Economist of 21st June: A Brixit looms MY PRINT column this week […]

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meaning and origin of ‘to keep up with the Joneses’

from Keeping Up With The Joneses (Cupples & Leon Company – New York, 1920) by ‘Pop’ Momand     MEANING   If you say that someone is keeping up with the Joneses, you mean that they are doing something in order to show that they have as much money as other people, rather than because […]

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