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word histories

“ad fontes!”

origin of the phrase ‘to act one’s age, and not one’s shoe size’

6th Oct 2018.Reading time 8 minutes.

USA, 1967—‘to act one’s age, and not one’s shoe size’—humorous extension of ‘to act one’s age’—in turn jocularly modified as ‘to act one’s shoe size, and not one’s age’

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meaning and origin of the British term ‘Aga saga’

4th Oct 2018.Reading time 8 minutes.

UK, 1992 (coined by Terence Blacker)—a novel depicting the lives and concerns of the British rural middle classes—from the association of Aga cookers with those classes

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meaning and origin of ‘Matthew effect’ and of ‘Matthew principle’

2nd Oct 2018.Reading time 16 minutes.

USA, 1960s—those who already have will receive more—refers to gospel of Matthew—coined by sociologist Robert King Merton

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‘to get one’s knickers in a twist’: meaning and origin

30th Sep 2018.Reading time 12 minutes.

(jocular) to become unduly agitated or angry—twisted clothing as a metaphor for mental confusion—UK, 1971, in the comic strip Andy Capp

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meaning and early instances of the phrase ‘like taking candy from a baby’

29th Sep 2018.Reading time 7 minutes.

USA, 1896—very easy to accomplish, sometimes with an implication of unscrupulousness

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meaning and origin of ‘to give somebody the (screaming) (h)abdabs’

28th Sep 2018.Reading time 8 minutes.

UK, 1942—fanciful word ‘(h)abdabs’: nervous anxiety or irritation—apparently originated in Royal Air Force slang during WWII

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meaning and early instances of the phrase ‘like shooting fish in a barrel’

24th Sep 2018.Reading time 9 minutes.

very easy to accomplish—USA, 1902, although recorded in 1898 with perhaps a different meaning

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meanings and origin of ‘flavour of the month/of the week’

22nd Sep 2018.Reading time 12 minutes.

UK, 1967—person or thing that enjoys a short period of great popularity—the particular ice-cream flavour promoted during a month/week

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meaning and origin of the phrase ‘away with the fairies’

20th Sep 2018.Reading time 10 minutes.

Irish English, 1907—out of touch with reality—ultimately refers to the belief that the fairies spirit away human beings

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origin of ‘the gnomes of Zurich’ (international bankers and financiers)

19th Sep 2018.Reading time 7 minutes.

British origin—popularised by Harold Wilson in 1956, but first recorded in The Observer (London) of 30 October 1955

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