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“ad fontes!”

Tag: folk etymology

meaning and origin of the phrase ‘round Robin Hood’s barn’

5th Dec 2018.Reading time 13 minutes.

USA, 1797—alludes to legendary outlaw Robin Hood—’barn’ (metaphor for the country as supply of food) was applied to any large space

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notes on the origin of ‘easy-peasy (lemon squeezy)’

27th Nov 2018.Reading time 8 minutes.

Contrary to what is claimed, ‘easy-peasy’ doesn’t seem to be of British origin, nor to be connected with the British washing-up liquid Sqezy.

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the authentic origin of the phrase ‘Elvis has left the building’

7th Oct 2018.Reading time 12 minutes.

first used on 22 September 1956 in order to stop hysterical fans from pursuing Elvis Presley at the end of a concert at Toledo

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the authentic origin of the phrase ‘(as) bold as brass’

10th Sep 2018.Reading time 8 minutes.

UK, 1789—aided by alliteration, arose from a long-established figurative use of ‘brass’, sometimes in association with ‘bold’

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notes on ‘the Scottish play’ (euphemism for ‘Macbeth’)

21st Aug 2018.Reading time 15 minutes.

early 20th century—according to theatrical superstition, ‘Macbeth’ is a very unlucky play—the origin of this belief is unknown

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history of ‘crow’s nest’ (lookout platform on a ship’s mast)

16th Aug 2018.Reading time 9 minutes.

UK, early 19th century—The invention of the crow’s nest is attributed to the Arctic whaler William Scoresby Senior (1760-1829).

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origin of the phrase ‘as the crow flies’ (in a straight line)

15th Aug 2018.Reading time 7 minutes.

Attested in 1761, ‘as the crow flies’ originally referred to the interior of a country; it did not originate in a practice of early navigation at sea.

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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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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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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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