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word histories

“ad fontes!”

meaning and origin of ‘nothing to write home about’

3rd Feb 2019.Reading time 5 minutes.

USA, 1905—unremarkable or mediocre—based on the image of something that is worth writing to one’s friends or family at home about

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meaning and origin of ‘you ain’t seen/heard nothing yet’

2nd Feb 2019.Reading time 10 minutes.

USA—‘you ain’t seen nothing yet’, 1897—‘you ain’t heard nothing yet’, first used by singer and actor Al Jolson in 1916

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origin and meanings of ‘shotgun wedding’, or ‘shotgun marriage’

30th Jan 2019.Reading time 16 minutes.

USA, 1878—an enforced wedding—from the fact that, on occasions, men were actually coerced at gunpoint into marriage

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meaning and origin of the phrase ‘to grasp the nettle’

28th Jan 2019.Reading time 5 minutes.

from 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

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the birth of some 19th-century advertising catchphrases

27th Jan 2019.Reading time 18 minutes.

the origin of some famous catchphrases used in 19th-century advertising campaigns

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origin of the catchphrase ‘Alas! my poor brother’

25th Jan 2019.Reading time 11 minutes.

from an advertisement for the concentrated beef extract Bovril, showing a bullock lamenting over a jar of the product

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meaning and origin of the phrase ‘(and) the best of British luck’

22nd Jan 2019.Reading time 11 minutes.

UK, 1957—an expression of encouragement, but often used ironically with the opposite meaning—origin unclear

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meaning and origin of the phrase ‘Benjamin’s portion’

19th Jan 2019.Reading time 6 minutes.

UK, 1753—the largest share—alludes to Genesis, 43:34, where Benjamin receives the largest portion of food from his brother Joseph

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origin of the phrase ‘the bitch goddess’ (material success)

17th Jan 2019.Reading time 10 minutes.

11 September 1906 in a letter addressed to the English novelist H. G. Wells by the American philosopher and psychologist William James

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meaning and origin of the Northern-Irish term ‘Tartan gang’

15th Jan 2019.Reading time 8 minutes.

1971—any of the Protestant street gangs of young men in Northern Ireland—from their traditional support of Glasgow Rangers Football Club

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