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
Finger in the dike/dyke

A stopgap measure dates from the late 19th century and derives from the story of the little Dutch boy who saved his town from flooding by stemming the...

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Finger on the pulse

This expression derives from the medical practice of taking someone’s pulse. It has been used in the figurative sense of staying abreast with latest d...

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Fingers crossed

The crossing of fingers to form a crude cross as a symbol of luck or good fortune is very ancient and pre-dates Christianity although it certainly rec...

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Fire and brimstone

Generally used figuratively these days to describe any fiery or incendiary speech and this usage dates from the late 18th/early 19th century. The orig...

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Fire in one’s belly

A phrase that describes unquenchable ambition or desire to succeed dates from the 19th century, perhaps from the uncomfortable feeling of extreme hung...

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Fire on all cylinders

see Firing on all cylinders


Fire someone

As in to dismiss or discharge from employment, was originally American slang from the late 19th century but is now part of Standard English. It derive...

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Firebrand

Originally, a piece of wood kindled with fire at one-end and carried as a torch dates from the late 14th /early 15th century. Within a short while the...

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Fired up

An American expression meaning angry or highly charged dates from the early 19th century.


Fired, as in dismissed or discharged from employment

see Fire someone.


Firing on all cylinders

The first figurative use of this idiom, meaning to work or perform at maximum efficiency is recorded in America from 1912. It obviously derives from t...

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First base

see Touch base


First dibs

To have dibs or first dibs is to have the right to choose or share something and is first recorded in this sense in America during the 1930s. Earlier,...

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Fish nor fowl

see Neither fish nor fowl


Fish out of water

Out of place, in an uncomfortable environment, no doubt a very ancient metaphor of which the first known use is Chaucer Canterbury Tales c. 1385.


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