meaning and origin of the phrase ‘weasel word’
USA, 1900—a word which takes away the meaning of the concept expressed—weasels are said to suck eggs out without breaking the shells
Read More“ad fontes!”
USA, 1900—a word which takes away the meaning of the concept expressed—weasels are said to suck eggs out without breaking the shells
Read More‘WAGs’ (1987): the wives and girlfriends of the players of the Scottish football team Dundee United F.C.—‘Gwags’ (2006): golfers’ wives and girlfriends
Read MoreUSA, 1909—a person given especially cordial treatment while visiting an organisation or place; a tourist expected to spend freely
Read Morecoined in The Saturday Review (London, 13 July 1861) about the shortage of important news in autumn in The Times of London
Read MoreUK, 1862—‘in every direction’ and ‘in a disorganised or confused state’—apparently originated in sports slang
Read Moreto put more effort in it—1976 with reference to putting one’s foot down on the accelerator pedal in a motor vehicle
Read MoreUSA—‘whammy’ (baseball, 1927): evil influence or hex—‘double whammy’ (boxing, 1938): evil spell more potent than a whammy
Read MoreUSA, 1984—the Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony awards viewed as a single achievement—coined by U.S. actor and musician Philip Michael Thomas
Read MoreUSA, 1878—to misunderstand—alludes to an accidental connexion between telephone or telegraph wires of different lines or circuits
Read Moresexual intercourse conducted quickly and without tenderness—originally used (USA, 1950) in the generic, neutral sense of ‘quickness’
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