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word histories

“ad fontes!”

origin of ‘couch potato’ and of ‘boob tuber’ (TV addict)

13th Aug 2018.Reading time 4 minutes.

In ‘couch potato’, ‘potato’ may be a pun on ‘tuber’ in ‘boob tuber’, from ‘boob tube’ (= television (set)), in which ‘boob’ means ‘stupid, foolish’.

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origin of ‘gone coon’ (a person or thing that is beyond hope)

12th Aug 2018.Reading time 8 minutes.

USA, 1837—The image is of a racoon that has been treed but the construction ‘gone + animal name’ has more generally been used in phrases of same sense.

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origin of ‘bee’ (social gathering for a specific purpose)

10th Aug 2018.Reading time 15 minutes.

USA, late 18th century—perhaps a folk-etymological alteration of British dialectal variants of ‘boon’, meaning ‘help given by neighbours’

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meaning and origin of the phrase ‘to dodge the column’

9th Aug 2018.Reading time 9 minutes.

to avoid work, to shirk one’s duty—originated in military slang during the First World War, the word ‘column’ denoting a formation of marching soldiers

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original meaning and sense development of ‘wild-goose chase’

8th Aug 2018.Reading time 7 minutes.

originally a kind of horse chase in which the second horse had to follow the course of the leader, like a flight of wild geese

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origin of ‘steeplechase’: a horse race with a steeple as goal

7th Aug 2018.Reading time 7 minutes.

UK, 1793—a horse race across a stretch of open countryside, with a church steeple in view as goal

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‘(just) what the doctor ordered’ (exactly what is needed)

5th Aug 2018.Reading time 10 minutes.

‘(just) what the doctor ordered’: very beneficial or desirable under the circumstances—origin: USA, second half of the 19th century

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origin of ‘to bell the cat’ (to undertake a very dangerous mission)

4th Aug 2018.Reading time 19 minutes.

ultimately based on the fable of the mice, or rats, who proposed to hang a bell round the cat’s neck, so as to be warned of its approach

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pejorative origin of ‘Nimby’ (opposition to a project in one’s vicinity)

2nd Aug 2018.Reading time 9 minutes.

USA, 1979—acronym from ‘not in my back yard’—first used in ‘the Nimby syndrome’ with reference to the disposal of nuclear waste

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‘bedside manner’: originally applied to fashionable ladies’ doctors

1st Aug 2018.Reading time 5 minutes.

UK, 1849—in the medical profession, appearances, among which a good bedside manner, prevailed over qualifications

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