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“ad fontes!”

meaning and origin of ‘belt and braces’–‘belt and suspenders’

13th Dec 2018.Reading time 11 minutes.

UK, 1948—USA, 1952—from the image of the over-cautious man who wears both a belt and braces/suspenders to hold up his trousers

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‘that’s how the cookie crumbles’ and ‘(that’s when) the cookie crumbled’

10th Dec 2018.Reading time 7 minutes.

USA, 1950s—‘that’s how the cookie crumbles’: that’s how it is—‘(that’s when) the cookie crumbled’: (that’s when) a decisive change in a situation occurred

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a personal view on the ‘animal-friendly’ phrases suggested by PETA

8th Dec 2018.Reading time 8 minutes.

Fundamentally, I object to the will of any group to artificially modify language in order to impose their world view.

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the curious case of ‘rob’/‘robe’ and of French ‘voler’ (‘to fly’/‘to steal’)

6th Dec 2018.Reading time 3 minutes.

‘robe’ originally denoted something that has been robbed—French ‘voler’ (‘to fly’) has come to mean ‘to steal’ via falconry

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meaning and origin of the phrase ‘round Robin Hood’s barn’

5th Dec 2018.Reading time 13 minutes.

USA, 1797—alludes to legendary outlaw Robin Hood—’barn’ (metaphor for the country as supply of food) was applied to any large space

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the early uses of ‘cool Britannia’ and their meanings

2nd Dec 2018.Reading time 15 minutes.

UK and Canada, from 1903 onwards—punningly alludes to ‘Rule Britannia’ (1740), the title of a popular patriotic song

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meaning and origin of the phrase ‘like a dog with two tails’

29th Nov 2018.Reading time 7 minutes.

USA, 1822—extremely pleased, delighted—alludes to the belief that a dog wags its tail as a sign of pleasure or happiness

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notes on the origin of ‘easy-peasy (lemon squeezy)’

27th Nov 2018.Reading time 8 minutes.

Contrary to what is claimed, ‘easy-peasy’ doesn’t seem to be of British origin, nor to be connected with the British washing-up liquid Sqezy.

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the Welsh origin of the phrase ‘to let the dog see the rabbit’

26th Nov 2018.Reading time 5 minutes.

1893—to allow someone to get on with their task—originated in Wales with reference to fair-mindedness in sports

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meaning and origin of the proverb ‘quot homines tot sententiæ’

25th Nov 2018.Reading time 10 minutes.

from Phormio, by the Roman dramatist Terence—appeared in English in the 1539 translation of Erasmus’s adages

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