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word histories

“ad fontes!”

notes on the phrase ‘Is the Pope (a) Catholic?’

27th Dec 2019.Reading time 16 minutes.

USA, 1951—rhetorical question used ironically as a response to a question or statement felt to be blatantly obvious

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‘a bird cannot fly on one wing’: meaning and origin

25th Dec 2019.Reading time 20 minutes.

USA, 1902—jocularly used to justify the necessity of taking another alcoholic drink—Irish variant (1947): ‘a bird never flew on one wing’

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‘no magic money (tree)’: justification for austerity

24th Dec 2019.Reading time 8 minutes.

2017-18: when confronted by nurses, both British Prime Minister and French President justified austerity policies by arguing that there is no magic money (tree)

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history of ‘money tree’ and ‘to shake the money tree’

23rd Dec 2019.Reading time 12 minutes.

‘money tree’ (UK, 1749): a source of easily obtained or unlimited money—‘to shake the money tree’ (UK, 1851)—related to proverb ‘money does not grow on trees’

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history of the phrase ‘(it) takes one to know one’

21st Dec 2019.Reading time 9 minutes.

USA, 1926—only a person with a given personality, characteristic, etc., is able to identify that quality in someone else—particularly used of homosexuals

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meaning and origin of the phrase “’arf a mo’, Kaiser!”

20th Dec 2019.Reading time 16 minutes.

“half a moment, Kaiser!”—1914 as the caption to a drawing by Bert Thomas, published in the Weekly Dispatch (London) to advertise a tobacco fund for soldiers

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history of the British noun ‘hole in the wall’ (ATM)

18th Dec 2019.Reading time 6 minutes.

1980—an automated teller machine installed in the wall of a bank or other building—first used attributively of machines operated by Lloyds Bank

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meaning and origin of ‘given away with a pound of tea’

17th Dec 2019.Reading time 8 minutes.

UK, 1881—used of something considered tawdry—from the grocers’ former practice of making a free gift with every pound of tea or with any fair-sized order

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The Guardian’s mystery man’s adventures

16th Dec 2019.Reading time 10 minutes.

1983—a mystery man whom the British journalist Alan Rusbridger challenged (as a prank) The Guardian’s readers to identify in order to claim a £10 book token

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history of the British name ‘Chalkie White’

15th Dec 2019.Reading time 12 minutes.

1973—a mystery man the Daily Mirror has challenged its readers to identify in order to claim prize money—‘Chalkie’ typical epithet for people surnamed ‘White’

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