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“ad fontes!”

meaning and early instances of ‘memory lane’

20th Nov 2018.Reading time 4 minutes.

an imaginary path through the nostalgically remembered past—USA, 1876, as ‘memory’s lane’ (‘memory’ in the genitive)

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origin of the Scottish and Irish phrase ‘on the buroo’ (‘on the dole’)

19th Nov 2018.Reading time 8 minutes.

Scotland, 1914: ‘buroo’, informal form of ‘bureau’ (generic sense)—later used specifically in the sense of Labour Bureau, hence of unemployment benefit (1921)

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meaning and origin of ‘the butcher, the baker, and the candlestick maker’

17th Nov 2018.Reading time 9 minutes.

UK, 1848—people of various professions; people of all kinds—alludes to ‘Rub a dub dub’, a nursery rhyme of the late 18th century

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the birth of the colourful noun ‘cackleberry’

15th Nov 2018.Reading time 4 minutes.

USA, 1889—humorous, informal: a hen’s egg—composed of ‘cackle’, the raucous clucking cry given by a hen, especially after laying an egg, and of ‘berry’

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meaning and origin of the phrase ‘blackboard jungle’

14th Nov 2018.Reading time 8 minutes.

USA, 1955—the education system regarded as a place where the law of the jungle applies—from the title of a 1954 novel and of its 1955 film adaptation

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meaning and origin of the phrase ‘tall poppy’

12th Nov 2018.Reading time 17 minutes.

UK, 1816—successful person attracting envious hostility—from Tarquin’s decapitation of the tallest poppies to indicate the fate of enemies

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meaning and origin of the British phrase ‘to be all mouth and (no) trousers’

10th Nov 2018.Reading time 8 minutes.

1961—to be all talk and no action—originally without the negative determiner ‘no’—refers to verbal and sexual arrogance

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meaning and origin of the American-English phrase ‘(strictly) for the birds’

8th Nov 2018.Reading time 10 minutes.

army slang, early 1940s—euphemistic shortening of ‘shit for the birds’—seems to allude to birds eating droppings from horses and cattle

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meaning and origin of ‘there’s one, or a sucker, born every minute’

7th Nov 2018.Reading time 9 minutes.

UK, 1806—expresses dismay or glee at the gullibility of people—originally used by those who were exploiting the credulity of others

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meaning and origin of the phrase ‘dirty work at the crossroads’

6th Nov 2018.Reading time 9 minutes.

UK, 1906—dishonest or illicit dealings—probably alludes to crossroads as settings for sinister actions, in particular to their former use as burial places for suicides

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