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word histories

“ad fontes!”

the phrase ‘two hairs past a freckle’ and variants

16th Oct 2019.Reading time 10 minutes.

used as a jocular reply by a person who does not have a watch, when asked what the time is—also ‘half past a freckle’, ‘according to the hairs on my wrist’

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‘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 ‘Poona’ as applied to army officers

13th Oct 2019.Reading time 10 minutes.

UK, 1930s—the reactionary opinions and pompous manner of the army officers who had been stationed at Poona, a military and administrative centre in India

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meaning and origin of ‘little Audrey joke’

11th Oct 2019.Reading time 21 minutes.

a joke involving a pun or double entendre opening with ‘but little Audrey just laughed and laughed because she knew’—January 1926, Kansas City Star (Missouri)

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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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history of the phrase ‘(all) dressed (up) like a Christmas tree’

7th Oct 2019.Reading time 19 minutes.

Britain and USA, early 1900s: over-elaborately dressed—since the mid-19th century, ‘like a Christmas tree’: overelaborateness, heterogeneousness, artificiality

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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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early occurrences of the phrase ‘a nail in the coffin’

4th Oct 2019.Reading time 11 minutes.

something that hastens, or contributes to, the end of the person or thing referred to—USA, 1805 in an open letter by the English political writer Thomas Paine

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early history of the phrase ‘the dog ate my homework’

2nd Oct 2019.Reading time 11 minutes.

far-fetched excuse for failing to hand in school homework—1st recorded UK 1929 but had already long been in usage at that time—dog eating a sermon UK 1894

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