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“ad fontes!”

Tag: USA

meaning and origin of ‘you ain’t seen/heard nothing yet’

2nd Feb 2019.Reading time 10 minutes.

USA—‘you ain’t seen nothing yet’, 1897—‘you ain’t heard nothing yet’, first used by singer and actor Al Jolson in 1916

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origin and meanings of ‘shotgun wedding’, or ‘shotgun marriage’

30th Jan 2019.Reading time 16 minutes.

USA, 1878—an enforced wedding—from the fact that, on occasions, men were actually coerced at gunpoint into marriage

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the birth of some 19th-century advertising catchphrases

27th Jan 2019.Reading time 18 minutes.

the origin of some famous catchphrases used in 19th-century advertising campaigns

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meaning and origin of the phrase ‘Benjamin’s portion’

19th Jan 2019.Reading time 6 minutes.

UK, 1753—the largest share—alludes to Genesis, 43:34, where Benjamin receives the largest portion of food from his brother Joseph

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origin of the phrase ‘the bitch goddess’ (material success)

17th Jan 2019.Reading time 10 minutes.

11 September 1906 in a letter addressed to the English novelist H. G. Wells by the American philosopher and psychologist William James

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origin of ‘when the going gets tough, the tough get(s) going’

2nd Jan 2019.Reading time 13 minutes.

USA, 1953—originally a motto adopted by football coaches—has often been used humorously with variation of the main clause

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early meanings of the portmanteau ‘screenager’

28th Dec 2018.Reading time 6 minutes.

USA—blend of ‘screen’ and ‘teenager’—(1957) teenagers reacting to a movie—(1985) teenagers as represented by TV and cinema

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‘to know —— like the back of one’s hand’ – ‘connaître —— comme sa poche’

27th Dec 2018.Reading time 5 minutes.

first attested in David Balfour (1893), by Robert Louis Stevenson—French equivalent ‘connaître comme sa/ses poche(s)’ (‘to know like one’s pocket(s)’ – 1791)

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origin and sense development of Anglo-Irish ‘bejesus’

23rd Dec 2018.Reading time 11 minutes.

1825, Anglo-Irish alteration of ‘by Jesus’—1867 as one word—‘the bejesus out of’ (1931) intensifies the action conveyed by the preceding verb

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meaning and origin of ‘belt and braces’–‘belt and suspenders’

13th Dec 2018.Reading time 11 minutes.

UK, 1948—USA, 1952—from the image of the over-cautious man who wears both a belt and braces/suspenders to hold up his trousers

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