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word histories

“ad fontes!”

a hypothesis as to the origin of ‘to get down to brass tacks’

6th Apr 2019.Reading time 17 minutes.

USA, 1868—‘brass tacks’: the nails studded over a coffin, hence figuratively the end of any possibility of deceit, the return to essentials

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‘come (right) down to the brass’|‘come down to brass tacks’

5th Apr 2019.Reading time 28 minutes.

USA—‘come (right) down to the brass’ (1854): get to the point; tackle the essentials—‘come down to brass tacks’ (1863): tackle the essentials

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origin of the term ‘brass monkey’ (extremely cold weather)

1st Apr 2019.Reading time 15 minutes.

USA, 1838—used with reference to extreme cold, extreme heat and other notions such as ridiculousness—from jocular allusions to brass statuettes of monkeys

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the figurative use of ‘bowler (hat)’: civilian life

30th Mar 2019.Reading time 7 minutes.

UK, 1925—symbol of civilian life as opposed to service in the armed forces and of demobilisation or dismissal from the army

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the long history of the phrase ‘blood, sweat, and tears’

28th Mar 2019.Reading time 21 minutes.

current use seems to allude to a speech by Winston Churchill in May 1940—but the metaphor goes back to the early 17th century

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meaning and origin of the term ‘Streisand effect’

26th Mar 2019.Reading time 9 minutes.

USA, 2005—coined by Mike Masnick on Techdirt.com—refers to Barbra Streisand’s counterproductive attempt in 2003 to ban a photo of her house

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the cultural background to the term ‘blind date’

25th Mar 2019.Reading time 17 minutes.

USA, 1922—seems to have originated in the slang of the flappers (the young women who showed freedom from conventions) and of their male counterparts

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the gruesome origin of the term ‘basket case’

22nd Mar 2019.Reading time 10 minutes.

USA, 1918—originally a soldier who had lost all four limbs during the First World War and had to be transported in a basket

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meaning and history of ‘to laugh/cry all the way to the bank’

21st Mar 2019.Reading time 9 minutes.

USA, 1908—to relish – or ironically deplore – the fact that one is making money, especially undeservedly or at the expense of others

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meaning and origin of the phrase ‘the tail wags the dog’

19th Mar 2019.Reading time 11 minutes.

USA, 1870—an unimportant or subsidiary factor, person or thing dominates the situation—based on the image of the inversion of the natural order

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