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Wednesday, June 11, 2008
wiffleball
Tags: Idioms, Sayings, Word Origins, Words, proverbs
wiffleball
Summer
Tags: Idioms, Sayings, Word Origins, Words, proverbs
summer
Thunder
Tags: Idioms, Sayings, Word Origins, Words, proverbs
thunder
Tuesday, May 13, 2008
OK
From Ask Oxford:
There have been numerous attempts to explain the emergence of this curious colloquial expression, which seems to have swept into popular use in the US during the mid-19th century. Most of them are undoubtedly pure speculation. It does not seem at all likely, from the linguistic and historical evidence, that it derives from the Scots expression 'och aye', the Greek ola kala ('it is good'), the Choctaw Indian oke or okeh ('it is so'), the French aux Cayes ('from Cayes', a port in Haiti with a reputation for good rum) or au quai ('to the quay', as supposedly used by French-speaking dockers), or the initials of a railway freight agent called Obediah Kelly who is said to have written them on lading documents he had checked.
The oldest written references to 'OK' result from its adoption as a slogan by the Democratic party during the American Presidential election of 1840. Their candidate, President Martin Van Buren, was nicknamed 'Old Kinderhook' (after his birthplace in New York State), and his supporters formed the 'OK Club'.
This undoubtedly helped to popularize the term (though it did not get President Van Buren re-elected!). During the late 1830s there had been a brief but widespread craze in the US for humorous misspellings, and the form orl korrekt which was among them could explain the initials 'OK'. Such a theory has been supported by more than one distinguished American scholar, and is given in many dictionaries, including Oxford dictionaries.
The only other theory with at least a degree of plausibility is that the term originated among Black slaves of West African origin, and represents a word meaning 'all right, yes indeed' in various West African languages. Unfortunately, historical evidence enabling the origin of this expression to be finally and firmly established may be hard to unearth.
Tags: Idioms, Sayings, Word Origins, Words, proverbs
ok
Flea market
Flea market comes from the French marché aux puces, a name originally given to a market in Paris. The fleas were thought to be in the goods, because they were of the kind to attract vermin. The earliest English use we have found dates from 1922.
Tags: Idioms, Sayings, Word Origins, Words, proverbs
Flea Market
Brass Monkey
The story goes that cannonballs used to be stored aboard ship in piles, on a brass frame or tray called a 'monkey'. In very cold weather the brass would contract, spilling the cannonballs: hence very cold weather is 'cold enough to freeze the balls off a brass monkey'. There are several problems with this story. The first is that the term 'monkey' is not otherwise recorded as the name for such an object. The second is that the rate of contraction of brass in cold temperatures is unlikely to be sufficient to cause the reputed effect. The third is that the phrase is actually first recorded as 'freeze the tail off a brass monkey', which removes any essential connection with balls. It therefore seems most likely that the phrase is simply a ribald allusion to the fact that metal figures will become very cold to the touch in cold weather (and some materials will become brittle).
Tags: Idioms, Sayings, Word Origins, Words, proverbs
Brass Monkey
Tuesday, October 16, 2007
Join us for another jam packed TNT show
9:00PM (EST): The TNT Preshow
10:00PM (EST): The Recording of the Weekly Podcast
11:00PM (EST): The TNT Postshow
As usual, join the official TNT chatroom (which are a bunch of drunk and rowdy fans!) hosted by Ustream.tv. Bring your favorite cocktail and join us each and every Tuesday! See the TNT FAQ on how to access the chatroom with an IRC client.
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Tuesday, August 28, 2007
Join Us For the Tuesday Night Tech Podcast TONIGHT!
Tuesday is here and we are getting ready for the 14th episode of the glorious Tuesday Night Tech Podcast tonight at 10PM Eastern time! We will drink heavily during the show and joke about the week's best and worst tech events from our stash of disturbing Google Reader feeds. We want you to join us (WITH COCKTAILS!) in our LIVE uStream chatroom, located here around 10PM Eastern time where you can listen and watch us both record the show. If you want to revel in the Podcast version instead, you can hear that afterwards on our website or through iTunes. And finally, you can see and read about what we talk about on our shownotes page, located here. We even have a few contests with giveaways running right now on the website as well!
Tuesday, August 07, 2007
Want to win a FREE iPhone Case from Tuesday Night Tech?
Hey, do you need a new iPhone case? Well, I got one for you in our first contest here at the Tuesday Night Tech Podcast. I cannot make this any easier--if you want to win this case, simply put a blog post about our show (a sentence or 2 with a link to our site, located at http://www.tuesdaynighttech.com) and whoever mails me first with the proof, you win the case. Could it be any easier? (We only have one to giveaway, so make it fast!)Thanks to iSkin for the Revo to give as a prize!
Thursday, July 19, 2007
Earn Free REAL money by voting on the internet
Click here to get started. I currently have earned $3 by doing nothing but clicking!
Thursday, June 07, 2007
Hurricane
The word Hurricane comes from 'Hurican', the Carib god of evil which has its roots in a name from Mayan folklore, Hurakan.
Hurakan was the ancient Mayan god of wind and storm. He was a creator god who breathed on the water as wind to dry it out and form the land.
When the gods became angry with the first human beings, Hurukan unleashed the deluge which destroyed them in a Flood.
Hurakan means "one-legged".
Tags: Idioms, Sayings, Word Origins, Words, proverbs
hurricane
Friday, June 01, 2007
Dodger
Tags: Idioms, Sayings, Word Origins, Words, proverbs
dodgers
Sunday, October 15, 2006
Yankee
Yankee
The origin is unknow but one theory holds that General James Wolfe (the battle hero of Quebec) used the word in a letter as a pejorative term for Americans. Another theory is that it comes from the Dutch 'janke' which is a diminutive of the name Jan.
This is from a website visitor:
I've read that he North American natives allied with the French during French & Indian Wars incorrectly pronounced the French word 'Anglais' as 'Yankeez'. Thus, the word 'Yankee' is a corruption of the French word for English."
Tags: Idioms, Sayings, Word Origins, Words, proverbs
Sabotage
First used in the early 1900's to describe French railway workers that were on strike and used to cut the sabot that held railroad tracks in place.
I was always taught at school (in England) that this was named after the clogs, or sabots, that the French rural peasants used to wear. Unhappy at the loss of their jobs during the mechanisation of agriculture in the 19th century, they would throw their sabots in the thresing machines causing them to fail. This method of damaging equipment came to be known as sabotage."
Tags: Idioms, Sayings, Word Origins, Words, proverbs
Make no bones about it
Make no bones about
The bones referred to (originally made from bone) are dice. And mean to state a fact in a way that allows no doubt.
When you 'make no bones about' it you are stating all the facts and leaving no doubt. It is believed that this idiom comes from dice which were originally made of bone."
Tags: Idioms, Sayings, Word Origins, Words, proverbs
Hold your horses
Hold your horses
A U.S. origin which dates back to the 19th century which means to be patient and to wait.
This pre dates even your brief history as well as most of Europe... even the Romans used to have a man to 'Hold your Horses' whilst a noisy battle was ensuing! It’s probably Chinese in origin as they invented gunpowder."
Tags: Idioms, Sayings, Word Origins, Words, proverbs
Wednesday, October 04, 2006
Bullpen
Bullpen
This is the area where relief pitchers throw their warmup pitches before entering the game. Nobody knows the exact origin, but one theory is that there used to be ads for 'Bull' Durham Tobacco on the outfield walls next to where the pitchers would warmup.
A second theory comes from the fact that when fans arrived late, they were herded like bulls into a roped off section which came to be known as the bullpen. This was the same area where pitchers warmed up.
A third theory is that pitchers who were taken out of the game had been 'slaughtered' like a bull; and the new pitcher would suffer the same fate.
Tags: Idioms, Sayings, Word Origins, Words, proverbs
Back to Square One
Back to square one
Meaning back to the beginning this idiom was first heard on football radio commentaries during games.Football isn't easy to commentate on on the radio so they had the idea of splitting up the field into notional numbered squares so that listeners could be told where the ball was. Whenever the game restarted after a break it was 'back to square one'."
Tags: Idioms, Sayings, Word Origins, Words, proverbs
Blackmail
Blackmail
The word 'blackmail' became popular in the 1800's and comes from the clan chieftains who ran protection rackets on farmers in Scottland. If the farmers didn't pay the mail (an old term for rent), the chieftains would steal their cattle and crops. Since this was considered evil, it was considered 'black'.
Tags: Idioms, Sayings, Word Origins, Words, proverbs
Monday, October 02, 2006
Barking up the wrong tree
Meaning: | Following a dead end path, pursuing an incorrect lead or assumption. |
Example: | If you think those gloves will convict OJ, you are barking up the wrong tree. |
Origin: | When using dogs in a foxhunt, the dogs sometimes corner the fox in a tree. The dogs will proceed to bark up at the fox. Barking up the wrong tree, where there is no fox, is a pointless exercise. |
Straight from the horse's mouth
Meaning: | Directly from the source. |
Example: | If you want the real story you have to get it straight from the horses mouth. |
Origin: | This is a boast of confidence from a racetrack tipster, who says he gets his information from the horses themselves—thereby assuring the bettor that the info is the correct. Thanks to Jim Hubbell Alternatively, A horse trader would bend the ear of a prospective buyer with all kinds of talk about the animal, but for a clear measure of its worth, one can simply look in the animal's mouth. You can tell a great deal about a horse from its mouth. Age, nutrition, general health of the horse, and if it had been over reined. If a horse is unruly you have to rein it in a lot, and this shows in the horse's mouth. |
Pass the buck
Meaning: | Pass off responsibility to someone else. |
Example: | In times of trouble, my old boss was quick to pass the buck. But when things went well, her mantra became "the buck stops here". |
Origin: | Some card games use a marker called a buck. Players take turns acting as dealer with the buck marking the current dealer. When the buck is passed to the next player, the responsibility for dealing is passed. Spawned the phrase "The buck stops here" popularized by President Harry Truman. A buck-slip is also a small piece of paper that is sometimes preprinted, or hand-written, and included the names of the people who were to receive a memo or report. It is a routing list. In the days before copy machines and computers people typed one memo, with a carbon copy, then passed the one copy of the memo around to the people listed on the buck slip. Each person initialed next to their name on the buck slip and passed the memo on to the next person on the buck slip. A tactic used to delay or delegate something was to pass the document on to the next person, without initialing the buck slip -- pass the buck (slip). When Harry said the buck stopped here he meant he wasn't going to pass the responsibility along. Although the buck slip was a popular use of the term, that usage may have originated with the gambling usage. |
Pushing the envelope
Meaning: | To approach or exceed known performance boundaries. |
Example: | Your performance at work is not exactly pushing the envelope. |
Origin: | This expression comes out of the US Air Force test pilot program of the late 1940's. The envelope refers to a plane's performance capabilities. The limits of the planes ability to fly at speeds and altitudes and under certain stresses define what is known as its performance envelope. It's an "envelope" in the sense that it contains the ranges of the plane's abilities. "Pushing the envelope" originally meant flying an aircraft at, or even beyond, its known or recommended limits. Thanks to Kensmark A safe bet is that many who pushed the envelope crashed. The expression was popularized by Tom Wolfe in his book "The right stuff" (1979) and later the movie of the same name. |
Tuesday, September 26, 2006
Kick the bucket
Kick the Bucket
This evocative phrase meaning to die is of uncertain etymology. The most likely explanation is that it does not refer to a washing tub or pail, the sense of bucket that most of us are familiar with. Instead, it comes from another sense of bucket meaning a yoke or beam from which something can be hung. The imagery evoked by the phrase is that of an animal being hung up for slaughter, kicking the beam from which it is suspended in its death throes.
This sense of bucket probably comes from the Old French buquet, meaning a trébuchet or balance. The more familiar sense of pail is likely from the Old French buket, meaning a tub or pail.
Shakespeare describes this imagery of a slaughtered animal's death throes in Henry IV, Part 2 (III.ii.283):
Swifter then hee that gibbets on the Brewers Bucket.
The earliest known use of the phrase to kick the bucket is from Grose's 1785 Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue, where it is glossed as:
To kick the bucket. to die. He kicked the bucket one day; he died one day.
It is often suggested that the term refers to a hanging, where the hanged stands on a pail which is then kicked out from under him. There is no evidence to support this and it probably got its start as speculation attempting to make sense of the phrase long after the sense of bucket meaning beam was forgotten.
(Source: Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd Edition)
BimboSayings, Words, Word Origins, Idioms, proverbs
Bated Breath
Several people have emailed me asking where bated breath comes from. Bate is a verb dating to the beginning of the14th century meaning to deprive or to lessen; it is a clipped form of abate.
Shakespeare was the first writer we know of to use bated breath, in 1596 in The Merchant of Venice, I.iii.125:
With bated breath, and whispring humblenesse.
Like most of Shakespeare's alleged coinages, this is probably not an invention of the Bard's; his use has simply survived while the writings of earlier and lesser writers have perished.
The term is commonly misspelled as baited breath.
(Source: Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd Edition)
Balls to the wall
Balls To The Wall
The phrase balls to the wall, meaning an all-out effort, comes from the world of aviation. On an airplane, the handles controlling the throttle and the fuel mixture are often topped with ball-shaped grips, referred to by pilots as (what else?) "balls." Pushing the balls forward, close to the front wall of the cockpit increases the amount of fuel going to the engines and results in the highest possible speed.The earliest written citation is from 1966-67, appearing in Harvey's Air War:
You know what happened on that first Doomsday Mission (as the boys call a big balls-to-the-wall raid) against Hanoi oil.
Several Korean War-era veterans have written me noting their use of the term during their service. The phrase may very well date to this earlier war, although we have no written evidence for it.
There are two common misconceptions about the phrase. The first is that it is a reference to a part of the male anatomy.
The second is that it arose in railroad work. A speed governor on train engines would have round, metal weights at the end of arms. As the speed increased, the spinning balls would rise--being perpendicular to the walls at maximum speed. But there is no evidence to support this story. No use of the phrase is known to exist prior to the mid-1960s, and all the early cites are from military aviation.
(Source: Historical Dictionary of American Slang)
Saturday, September 02, 2006
Scumbag
From The Mavens' word of the day:
Scum itself has been used for many hundreds of years to refer to offensive, disgusting, or disreputable people, and thus many people take scumbag as an intensification of this scum with the suffix -bag, a frequent element in abusive slang terms (dirtbag; hosebag; sleazebag; etc.), all of which are, however, later than scumbag.
Though most people seem not to realize it now, the original sense of scumbag was 'a condom', based on the slightly earlier, and both rather obvious, scum 'semen' and bag 'a condom'.
People's reaction to scumbag today tend to reflect their awareness of the 'condom' sense, with those who are aware of it finding scumbag significanly more offensive than those who are not. While certainly offensive, scumbag is not in the top tier of the most offensive terms in English. It is more offensive than jerk or creep, but less offensive than, say, asshole. But to publicly call an elected official a scumbag still seems a fairly extreme step, even given the current state of political discourse in America. Note that the New York Times, often squeamish about such matters, did not print the word and used a euphemism instead.
Though most sources claim that both senses, 'condom' and 'disreputable person', date from the late 1960s, the first sense is found in underground literature at least by the 1930s, and the second by 1950.
Tuesday, August 29, 2006
Son of a gun
SAY WHAT?
A derogitory term, sometimes used as a suggestion of toughness. Rogue or scamp.
Origin
After sailors had crossed the Atlantic to the West Indies, they would take the native women on board the ship and have their way with them in between the cannons. Some of the women the sailors left behind would have boys, who were called sons between the guns.
Wednesday, August 23, 2006
Alibi
Say What?
The plea or mode of defense under which a person on trial for a crime proves or attempts to prove that he was in another place when the alleged act was committed; as, to set up an alibi; to prove an alibi.
Meaning.
Latin, meaning elsewhere
Sunday, August 20, 2006
Mafia
Say What?
Mafia
From Wikipedia
The Mafia, also referred to in Italian as Cosa Nostra ("Our Thing" or "This Thing of Ours"), is a secret society formed in the mid-19th century in Sicily. An offshoot emerged on the East Coast of the United States during the late 19th century following waves of Italian immigration to that country.
The Mafia's power in the United States peaked in the mid-20th century, until a series of FBI investigations in the 1970s and 1980s reduced the Mafia's influence. Despite its decline the Mafia continues to be the most dominant criminal organization operating in the U.S. and uses this status to maintain control over much of both Chicago's and New York City's organized criminal activity. The Mafia and its reputation have become entrenched in American popular culture, portrayed in movies, TV shows, and even commercial advertising.
Actual Meaning in ItallianBeauty, Excellence, Bravery
Saturday, August 19, 2006
Wednesday, August 16, 2006
Keep a stiff upper lip
Say What?
Stay calm, resolute and non emotional.
Meaning
When someone gets upset, his or her lips might tremble. If you keep a stiff upper lip, you are trying not to show you are upset. This expression dates back to the 1800s, but it is still used today. Similar to "keep your chin up" and "keep your pecker up".
Technorati Tags: Sayings, Words, Word Origins,Idioms,Proverbs
Friday, August 11, 2006
Famous Names: Lushington
Dr. Thomas Lushington
A heavy drinking Englishman in the late 1600's. So known for his heavy drinking a pub was named after him "City of Lushington" 200 years after he died. The patrons of the club were conscidered "lushes" or "lush"
Technorati Tags: Sayings, Words, Word Origins,Idioms,Lush
Proverbs
Famous Names: Cadillac
Famous Names: Lynch
Captain William Lynch
A Farmer during the Revolutionary war organized groups of people later called "Lynch Mobs" of local townsfolks to provide justice to local British collaborators. Sometimes resulting in a hanging or "Lynching" a non trial form of justice.
Technorati Tags: sayings, Words, Word Origins,Idioms,Lynch
Proverbs
Quid pro quo
Something given in return for a item of equivalent value - like tit for tat.
Origin
A Latin term meaning 'something for something' or 'this for that'. The idea is more commonly expressed in English as 'one good turn deserves another'. This has been in the language since at least 1654, as here in H. L'Estrange's, 'The Reign of King Charles':
"One good turn deserves another."
Technorati Tags: sayings, Words, Word Origins,Idioms,
Proverbs
People who live in glass houses should not throw stones
Say what?
Those who are vulnerable should not attack others.
Origin
The proverb has been traced back to Geoffrey Chaucer's 'Troilus and Criseyde' (1385). George Herbert wrote in 1651: 'Whose house is of glass, must not throw stones at another.' This saying is first cited in the United States in 'William & Mary College Quarterly' (1710). Twenty-six later Benjamin Franklin wrote, 'Don't throw stones at your neighbors', if your own windows are glass.' 'To live in a glass house' is used as a figure of speech referring to vulnerability." From "Random House Dictionary of Popular Proverbs and Sayings" (1996) by Gregory Y. Titelman (Random House, New York, 1996).
Technorati Tags: sayings, Words, Word Origins,Idioms,
Proverbs
Achilles' heel
From Wikipedia
Meaning
A person's weak spot
Origin
In the myths surrounding the Trojan War, Achilles died from a heel wound as the result of an arrow fired by Paris.
According to a myth arising later, his mother, Thetis, had dipped the infant Achilles in the river Styx, holding onto him by his heel, and he became invulnerable where the waters touched him -- that is, everywhere but the areas covered by her thumb and forefinger -- implying that only a heel wound could have been his downfall.
The use of "Achilles' heel" (or "Achilles heel") as an English expression for "area of weakness, vulnerable spot" dates only to 1855 (Merriam-Webster), or, in the form "heel of Achilles," 1810 (OED: Coleridge, "Ireland, that vulnerable heel of the British Achilles".)
The Achilles' heel as a singular weakness is a cliche in superhero comics.
Technorati Tags: sayings, Words, Word Origins,Idioms,
Hanky-panky
Meaning
Trickery - double dealing. Sexual connotations
Origin
Nonsense terms that was just made up as having an attractive alliteration or rhyme, like 'the bee's knees', 'the mutt's nuts' etc. The words themselves have no inherent meaning, and it was probably a development of the similar term - 'hocus pocus'.
Thursday, August 10, 2006
Down the tubes
Davy Jones Locker
Say What?
Bottom of the ocean. Going overboad.
Origin
Unknown... But this site seems to have an answer.
from Tobias Smollet's The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle (1751): "This same Davy Jones, according to the mythology of sailors, is the fiend that presides over all the evil spirits of the deep...."
But could be..., from Yahoo
One legend suggests that a particularly fiendish pub owner named David Jones used to incapacitate hapless drinkers in his ale locker, and send them off aboard ships. Sounds like a handy way of disposing of your enemies.
Gad Zooks
A general exclaimant
Origin
Blimey is a shortened form of gorblimey which is a garbled way of saying "God blind me". In full, streuth is "by God's truth" and it is a survivor of a large genre of God's [something]. Thus, gadzooks (or od's wucks) is literally "God's hooks", the hooks likely being a reference to the nails used to fasten Christ to the cross.
A Drop in the bucket
A very small proportion of the whole.
Origin
From the Bible, Isaiah 40:15:
"Behold, the nations are as a drop of a bucket, and are counted as the small dust of the balance: behold, he taketh up the isles as a very little thing."
Technorati Tags: sayings, Words, Word Origins,