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“ad fontes!”

Tag: Ireland

meaning and origin of the phrase ‘down the Swanee’

29th Nov 2019.Reading time 11 minutes.

UK, 1926—completely lost or wasted—seems to allude to ‘Old Folks at Home’ (1851), also known as ‘Swanee River’, by the U.S. songwriter Stephen Foster

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meaning and origin of the phrase ‘nudge, nudge’

25th Nov 2019.Reading time 9 minutes.

draws attention to a sexual innuendo—generally refers to an October 1969 sketch from the British comedy series Monty Python’s Flying Circus—but in use earlier

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meaning and origin of the phrase ‘to come to Hecuba’

20th Nov 2019.Reading time 9 minutes.

to come to the point—in Shakespeare’s ‘Hamlet’, the title role urges an actor to go straight to Hecuba’s reaction to her husband’s killing

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meanings of the British phrase ‘vicarage tea-party’

9th Nov 2019.Reading time 10 minutes.

20th century—denotes something mild, innocuous or uneventful—but those notions have been associated with vicarage tea-parties since the 19th century

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meanings and origin of ‘the angels’ share’

4th Nov 2019.Reading time 6 minutes.

UK, 1970—the quantity of distilled spirits lost to evaporation while ageing in wooden casks; the vapours resulting from this process—calque of French ‘la part des anges’

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history of ‘did it hurt when you fell from heaven?’

29th Oct 2019.Reading time 13 minutes.

originally a chat-up line that supposedly met a demand for originality (USA 1985)—while it soon became one of the favourite lines used by men, women loathe it

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the British and Irish phrase ‘No-Mates’ (friendless)

26th Oct 2019.Reading time 16 minutes.

UK, 1993—a person, usually a man, regarded as friendless—often used as a humorous surname following a generic first name such as ‘Billy’

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meaning and origin of the phrase ‘only here for the beer’

19th Oct 2019.Reading time 6 minutes.

UK Ireland—only here for a bit of fun—from “I’m only here for the beer. It’s Double Diamond”, advertising slogan for Double Diamond pale ale from 1969 onwards

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‘how different is the home life of our own dear Queen’

19th Oct 2019.Reading time 13 minutes.

a break with traditional values—at a performance of Anthony and Cleopatra, a Victorian lady allegedly contrasted Queen Victoria’s homelife to Cleopatra’s

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meaning and history of the phrase ‘feed the brute’

17th Oct 2019.Reading time 12 minutes.

nourish your husband—1882 in ‘Vanity Fair’ (London)—popularised in 1885 by a cartoon by George du Maurier, published in ‘Punch, or the London Charivari’

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