meaning and origin of the British phrase ‘a racing dog’s bollocks’
UK, 1988—used in similes to denote something that protrudes—originated in British military slang
Read More“ad fontes!”
UK, 1988—used in similes to denote something that protrudes—originated in British military slang
Read MoreUK—a confused mess—alludes to the jumbled nature of a dog’s meal—‘like a dog’s dinner’: over-elaborately or ostentatiously dressed
Read MoreUK, 1882—to remain motionless and quiet; to keep a low profile—probably from ‘dog’ and suffix ‘-o’, with allusion to the characteristically light sleep of a dog
Read MoreUSA, 1870—an unimportant or subsidiary factor, person or thing dominates the situation—based on the image of the inversion of the natural order
Read MoreUSA, 1822—extremely pleased, delighted—alludes to the belief that a dog wags its tail as a sign of pleasure or happiness
Read More1893—to allow someone to get on with their task—originated in Wales with reference to fair-mindedness in sports
Read MoreUSA, 1931—phrase based on the phonetic similarity of the two words that compose it—implies lack of discrimination
Read More‘crumbs from a rich man’s table’—late 18th century—from the parable of the rich man and Lazarus in the gospel of Luke, 16:19-31
Read MoreUK, 1793—a horse race across a stretch of open countryside, with a church steeple in view as goal
Read More1808, as ‘to talk a horse’s hind leg off’—‘[animal’s] hind leg off’ is probably a hyperbolic extension of ‘to talk’, emphasising the speaker’s persistence or eloquence
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