The phrase ‘(to be left) to hold the baby’ originated in stock markets.
UK, 1872—alludes to a stranger’s accidental (as opposed to a parent’s legal) responsibility for an infant
Read More“ad fontes!”
UK, 1872—alludes to a stranger’s accidental (as opposed to a parent’s legal) responsibility for an infant
Read Morean imaginary path through the nostalgically remembered past—USA, 1876, as ‘memory’s lane’ (‘memory’ in the genitive)
Read MoreScotland, 1914: ‘buroo’, informal form of ‘bureau’ (generic sense)—later used specifically in the sense of Labour Bureau, hence of unemployment benefit (1921)
Read MoreUK, 1848—people of various professions; people of all kinds—alludes to ‘Rub a dub dub’, a nursery rhyme of the late 18th century
Read MoreUSA, 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’
Read MoreUSA, 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
Read MoreUK, 1816—successful person attracting envious hostility—from Tarquin’s decapitation of the tallest poppies to indicate the fate of enemies
Read More1961—to be all talk and no action—originally without the negative determiner ‘no’—refers to verbal and sexual arrogance
Read Morearmy slang, early 1940s—euphemistic shortening of ‘shit for the birds’—seems to allude to birds eating droppings from horses and cattle
Read MoreUK, 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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