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
Best bib and tucker

This now refers to our Sunday best or our smartest clothes worn for that special occasion. The expression in this sense dates from the mid-18th centur...

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Best foot forward

see Put/set the best foot forward


Best of both worlds

is is an idiom that refers to reaping the benefits from two seemingly opposed alternatives. Whilst the concept may very well be ancient, the expressio...

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Best of British (luck)

British informal (obviously) wishing someone luck, especially when one’s luck may not transpire. It is thought to have originated during the early day...

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Best pleased

see Not best pleased


Bestride the world like a Colossus

This expression is sometimes used to describe a dominant or forceful personality. The allusion is to the Colossus of Rhodes, one of the seven ancient...

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Bet the farm/house/ranch

If one felt so confident of a wager that one would bet one’s farm or ranch on it, it would surely constitute a very sure bet. The expression is Americ...

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Bet your boots

see Bet your…


Bet your bottom dollar

This is an American expression dating from the mid-19th century. It alludes to risking the last money you have, the last dollar at the bottom of one’s...

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Bet your house

see Bet your…


Bet your shirt

see Bet your…


Bet your…

There is a whole host of betting expressions, most of which originated in America during the mid to late 19th century, where one can bet one’s boots,...

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Betrayed by one’s manners

This is an old maxim by which a person’s upbringing and values can be ascertained. It is often attributed to William of Wykeham whose motto was, “mann...

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Better dead than Red

This anti-Communist slogan is thought to date from WWII when it was adopted by Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels to encourage Germans in their fight...

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Better half

Usually describes a man’s partner, wife or loved one. It was coined by the poet Philip Sydney in 1580 in The Arcadia, “My dear, my better half”.


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