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“ad fontes!”

the history of ‘dog’s breakfast’ and ‘dog’s dinner’

25th Apr 2019.Reading time 23 minutes.

UK—a confused mess—alludes to the jumbled nature of a dog’s meal—‘like a dog’s dinner’: over-elaborately or ostentatiously dressed

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meaning and origin of ‘Procrustean bed/Procrustean remedy’

23rd Apr 2019.Reading time 16 minutes.

a means of enforcing conformity—Greek mythology: Procrustes was a robber who made his victims fit a bed by either stretching them longer or cutting them shorter

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meaning and origin of the phrase ‘to go commando’

21st Apr 2019.Reading time 11 minutes.

USA, 1974—to wear no underpants—originated in university slang—perhaps because commandos wear no underpants in order to prevent crotch rot and rashes

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meaning and possible origin of ‘to push the boat out’

20th Apr 2019.Reading time 14 minutes.

UK, 1915—to be lavish in one’s celebrations or spending—Army and Navy slang: to buy a round of drinks—’a boat’ might be metaphorical for ‘a glass’ (i.e., ‘a drink’)

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meaning, origin and early instances of ‘to lie doggo’

18th Apr 2019.Reading time 13 minutes.

UK, 1882—to remain motionless and quiet; to keep a low profile—probably from ‘dog’ and suffix ‘-o’, with allusion to the characteristically light sleep of a dog

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meaning and origin of the phrase ‘Dunkirk spirit’

16th Apr 2019.Reading time 6 minutes.

1940 as ‘spirit of Dunkirk’—determination to endure hardship—refers to the evacuation of the British Expeditionary Force from Dunkirk in May/June 1940

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the military origin of the adjective ‘last-ditch’

15th Apr 2019.Reading time 13 minutes.

UK, 1845: made as a last desperate attempt—from the 18th-century phrase ‘to die in the last ditch’, ‘ditch’ denoting a defensive entrenchment

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early meanings of ‘Bamboo Curtain’

13th Apr 2019.Reading time 5 minutes.

USA, 1948—notional barrier between China and non-Communist countries—after ‘Iron Curtain’—first used of censorship in South-East Asia

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history of the terms ‘man Friday’ and ‘girl Friday’

11th Apr 2019.Reading time 13 minutes.

USA—‘man Friday’ 1802: alludes to the name of Robinson Crusoe’s servant in Daniel Defoe’s novel—‘girl Friday’ 1929: coined on the pattern of ‘man Friday’

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meaning and origin of the British phrase ‘to go down the pan’

8th Apr 2019.Reading time 6 minutes.

UK, 1950—to be completely lost or wasted; to fail utterly—alludes to ‘pan’ in the sense of the bowl of a toilet

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