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“ad fontes!”

Tag: phrases

‘it’s baloney, no matter how thin you slice it’

27th Jan 2020.Reading time 9 minutes.

USA, 1926—meaning: it’s utter nonsense, no matter how hard you try to prove the opposite—from ‘bologna’: a large smoked sausage made of seasoned mixed meats

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notes on the phrase ‘don’t hurry, Hopkins!’

25th Jan 2020.Reading time 5 minutes.

addressed to slow persons—1858—said to be from a promissory note in which a Kentuckian named Hopkins wrote it was agreed he was not to be hurried into paying

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notes on the phrase ‘a penny bun costs twopence’

24th Jan 2020.Reading time 10 minutes.

1911—expenses rise as soon as one marries or begins cohabiting, or even carries on a romantic relationship—antonym of ‘two can live as cheaply as one’

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occurrences of ‘the full monty’ from 1989 to 1994

23rd Jan 2020.Reading time 22 minutes.

used to mean ‘everything which is necessary, appropriate or possible’, sometimes with punning reference to the British comedy group ‘Monty Python’

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meaning and origin of ‘to follow the man from Cook’s’

20th Jan 2020.Reading time 15 minutes.

UK, 1899—to comply with someone else’s option—title of a song from musical comedy ‘A Runaway Girl’ (1898) with reference to travel agency Thomas Cook and Son

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meaning and origin of ‘that’s the way the mop flops’

16th Jan 2020.Reading time 7 minutes.

that’s the way the situation is, and it must be accepted, however undesirable—1955, US teenagers’ slang—partially based on identical sounds in ‘mop’ and ‘flop’

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history of ‘that’s the stuff to give ’em/to give the troops’

15th Jan 2020.Reading time 11 minutes.

First World War military slang—extended forms of ‘that’s the stuff’—used in approval of what has just been done or said, or to mean ‘that is what is needed’

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meaning and origin of ‘up the wooden hill to Bedfordshire’

12th Jan 2020.Reading time 18 minutes.

‘upstairs to bed’—UK, 1923: title of a song by Nixon Grey—‘Bedfordshire’ jocular extension of ‘bed’ (1665)—‘the wooden hill’ metaphor for ‘the stairs’ (1856)

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history of ‘come up and see my etchings’

11th Jan 2020.Reading time 19 minutes.

USA, early 20th century—used as an invitation to sexual dalliance—in 1937, William Hays’s censorship office apparently banned it in cinema films

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meaning and origin of ‘booked any good Reds lately?’

9th Jan 2020.Reading time 7 minutes.

USA, 1941—jocular alteration of the conversational gambit ‘read any good books lately?’ with reference to the investigations into alleged Communist activity

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