A-Z Database

A-Z Database

All A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Eyes are the window to the soul

This well-known saying or proverb articulates the concept of looking into a person’s eyes in order to discern their true character or intentions. It i...

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Eyes bigger than one’s belly

An old English proverb appears in Jacula Prudentum (1651) by George Herbert. It means that the desire for something is often far greater than one’s ca...

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Eyes in the back of one’s head

This expression meaning that a person can be super-aware of what is going on all around them, as if they had a pair of extra eyes, dates from the mid-...

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Eyewash

British expression for rubbish or twaddle dates from the mid to late 19th century, probably connected to the expression my eye i.e. something calculat...

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Face that launched a thousand ships

The face that launched a thousand ships was the face of Helen, the wife of King Menelaus of Sparta who ran off with Paris of Troy and precipitated the...

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Face the music

To face the music is an American expression from the early 19th century meaning to come to terms boldly with the consequences of one’s actions. No one...

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Faff

To behave in a confused, unproductive and disorganised manner dates from the 1980s and its origin is unknown although there is the word faffle listed...

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Fag

British slang for cigarette dates from the late 19th century and derives from a much older expression ‘fag-end’ that curiously enough is not slang and...

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Faggot

American slang for a homosexual dates from the early 20th century and most likely derives from an earlier meaning of faggot, a derogatory term for a w...

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Faint heart never won a fair lady

This very old proverb meaning that boldness triumphs in affairs of the heart has been around in various forms since the 1500s and probably before. It...

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Fair and square

see Square/Square deal/Square meal etc


Fair crack of the whip

This expression meaning an equal chance or opportunity to achieve something may have been a British expression before its first citation in an Austral...

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Fair dinkum

see Dinkum


Fair hands

Made with my own fair hands is a common enough expression today, but it remains curious that we still reserve the word fair for use in this one partic...

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Fair means or foul

By fair means or foul means by any possible means and dates from the early 17th century. It derives from Shakespeare Macbeth Act I, Scene I, although...

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