early instances of the term ‘pompom girl’
USA, 1913—a female cheerleader who waves a pair of pompoms (large round clusters of brightly coloured streamers) in support of a sports team
Read More“ad fontes!”
USA, 1913—a female cheerleader who waves a pair of pompoms (large round clusters of brightly coloured streamers) in support of a sports team
Read Moreto die; to be lost or destroyed; to meet with disaster—1914, Army slang—probably from the notion of the setting sun symbolising disappearance or finality
Read MoreUK, 1892—postdates by several years variants such as ‘eat an apple on going to bed, and you will keep the doctor from earning his bread’
Read More1968—Liverpool Roman Catholic cathedral—from the large number of Roman Catholics of Irish descent in Liverpool and the resemblance of the cathedral to a tepee
Read More1973—from ‘the unacceptable face of capitalism’, used by Prime Minister Edward Heath during a debate at the House of Commons on 15 May 1973
Read Morewomen regarded collectively as objects of sexual desire; sexual intercourse—first recorded in ‘The Gilt Kid’ (1936), by James Curtis (Geoffrey Basil Maiden)
Read MoreUSA, 1942, Army slang—popularised in the Army weekly ‘Yank’ by ‘The Sad Sack’, a cartoon strip by George Baker, depicting the misfortunes of an inept private
Read MoreUSA, 1904—from the image of shopping until one is physically exhausted and unable to continue—alludes to the consumerist avidity prompted by department stores
Read MoreAustralia and New Zealand 1913—alludes to horse racing, in which a horse wins a race by being the first to pass the finishing post
Read Morethe time of one’s greatest success—from the speech made on 18 June 1940 by P.M. Winston Churchill after the fall of France and before the Battle of Britain
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