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“ad fontes!”

Tag: USA

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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‘to play billiards well is a sign of a misspent youth’

7th Jan 2020.Reading time 15 minutes.

UK, 1884—often erroneously attributed to philosopher Herbert Spencer, who said he only repeated an assertion made by a friend of his, Charles Roupell

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history of the phrase ‘every picture tells a story’

3rd Jan 2020.Reading time 19 minutes.

used of images suggestive of real or imaginary events—UK and USA early 1900s: popularised by its use as an advertising slogan for Doan’s Backache Kidney Pills

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‘mushroom treatment: kept in the dark and fed bullshit’

1st Jan 2020.Reading time 9 minutes.

American English, 1965—signification: to be kept in a state of ignorance and told nonsense—in use a few years later in Australian English and British English

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‘Is a bear Catholic?’ | ‘Does the Pope shit in the woods?’

30th Dec 2019.Reading time 15 minutes.

USA, 1984—used to indicate that something is blatantly obvious—humorously from ‘Is the Pope Catholic?’ and ‘Does a bear shit in the woods?’

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history of the phrase ‘Does a bear shit in the woods?’

29th Dec 2019.Reading time 22 minutes.

USA—used ironically as a response to a question or statement felt to be blatantly obvious—from 1959 onwards as ‘Does a bear live in the woods?’ and variants

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notes on the phrase ‘Is the Pope (a) Catholic?’

27th Dec 2019.Reading time 16 minutes.

USA, 1951—rhetorical question used ironically as a response to a question or statement felt to be blatantly obvious

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‘a bird cannot fly on one wing’: meaning and origin

25th Dec 2019.Reading time 20 minutes.

USA, 1902—jocularly used to justify the necessity of taking another alcoholic drink—Irish variant (1947): ‘a bird never flew on one wing’

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history of ‘money tree’ and ‘to shake the money tree’

23rd Dec 2019.Reading time 12 minutes.

‘money tree’ (UK, 1749): a source of easily obtained or unlimited money—‘to shake the money tree’ (UK, 1851)—related to proverb ‘money does not grow on trees’

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history of the phrase ‘(it) takes one to know one’

21st Dec 2019.Reading time 9 minutes.

USA, 1926—only a person with a given personality, characteristic, etc., is able to identify that quality in someone else—particularly used of homosexuals

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