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“ad fontes!”

Tag: dictionaries

‘over a barrel’: meaning, early instances and probable origin

5th May 2019.Reading time 11 minutes.

USA, 1890—at someone’s mercy—probably alludes to the practice of binding a person over an overturned barrel in order to beat them

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early American-English figurative uses of ‘rock bottom’

1st May 2019.Reading time 20 minutes.

1858-60 steadfast political commitment—1861-62 sureness—1864-65 very low retail prices—1895-66 (economics) the lowest possible level (?)

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meaning and possible origin of ‘the (dog’s) bollocks’

27th Apr 2019.Reading time 10 minutes.

UK, 1980s—the very best—perhaps from ‘it sticks out like a dog’s ballocks’, denoting something obvious, hence someone or something that sticks out from the rest

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meaning and origin of the British phrase ‘a racing dog’s bollocks’

26th Apr 2019.Reading time 6 minutes.

UK, 1988—used in similes to denote something that protrudes—originated in British military slang

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meaning and origin of the phrase ‘to go commando’

21st Apr 2019.Reading time 11 minutes.

USA, 1974—to wear no underpants—originated in university slang—perhaps because commandos wear no underpants in order to prevent crotch rot and rashes

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meaning and possible origin of ‘to push the boat out’

20th Apr 2019.Reading time 14 minutes.

UK, 1915—to be lavish in one’s celebrations or spending—Army and Navy slang: to buy a round of drinks—’a boat’ might be metaphorical for ‘a glass’ (i.e., ‘a drink’)

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the military origin of the adjective ‘last-ditch’

15th Apr 2019.Reading time 13 minutes.

UK, 1845: made as a last desperate attempt—from the 18th-century phrase ‘to die in the last ditch’, ‘ditch’ denoting a defensive entrenchment

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history of the terms ‘man Friday’ and ‘girl Friday’

11th Apr 2019.Reading time 13 minutes.

USA—‘man Friday’ 1802: alludes to the name of Robinson Crusoe’s servant in Daniel Defoe’s novel—‘girl Friday’ 1929: coined on the pattern of ‘man Friday’

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the figurative use of ‘bowler (hat)’: civilian life

30th Mar 2019.Reading time 7 minutes.

UK, 1925—symbol of civilian life as opposed to service in the armed forces and of demobilisation or dismissal from the army

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the cultural background to the term ‘blind date’

25th Mar 2019.Reading time 17 minutes.

USA, 1922—seems to have originated in the slang of the flappers (the young women who showed freedom from conventions) and of their male counterparts

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