meaning and origin of the phrase ‘wigs on the green’
Ireland, 1820—violent quarrel—refers to the fact that wigs are liable to fall or to be pulled off in a fray
Read More“ad fontes!”
Ireland, 1820—violent quarrel—refers to the fact that wigs are liable to fall or to be pulled off in a fray
Read MoreUSA—probably a reduplication based on ‘honk’—appeared in Texas as the name of a theatre (1889) and of a variety show (1890)
Read MoreUSA, 1927—to face up to the realities of an unpleasant situation—popularised by American advice columnist Ann Landers (Esther Pauline Lederer – 1918-2002)
Read MoreUSA, 1905—unremarkable or mediocre—based on the image of something that is worth writing to one’s friends or family at home about
Read MoreUSA—‘you ain’t seen nothing yet’, 1897—‘you ain’t heard nothing yet’, first used by singer and actor Al Jolson in 1916
Read MoreUSA, 1878—an enforced wedding—from the fact that, on occasions, men were actually coerced at gunpoint into marriage
Read Morefrom the idea that it takes some pluck to put to the test the belief that a nettle stings less painfully when seized tightly than when touched lightly
Read Morethe origin of some famous catchphrases used in 19th-century advertising campaigns
Read Morefrom an advertisement for the concentrated beef extract Bovril, showing a bullock lamenting over a jar of the product
Read MoreUK, 1957—an expression of encouragement, but often used ironically with the opposite meaning—origin unclear
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