A-Z Database
see Best bib and tucker
A punch or sharp blow with the fist is originally American from the mid-19th century, probably imitative or echoic.
The dreadful, so-called reality TV show borrowed the first part of this quotation, which is from George Orwell’s famous novel 1984 published in 1948....
This expression with a particularly high cringe factor is American slang for big money or a lot of money as in “he is earning big bucks now”. It dates...
This expression refers to the most influential person, the boss, the person in authority. Depending on the context, it may or may not be disrespectful...
Dates originally from the mid-19th century in America, meaning an important poker game or business transaction and it can still mean the latter in som...
see Whole enchilada
This British working class expression for a weakling or an ineffectual male is thought to have originated in the North of England around the mid-20th...
Its figurative meaning for pre-eminent, important persons or heavyweights dates from the mid-19th century. Charles Dickens used the metaphor in a lett...
More modern version of big gun and dates from c. 1930.
This American expression as in to hit the big time means to ascend the upper echelons of a pursuit or profession e.g. Hollywood stardom, fame etc and...
An important, influential person, an Americanism that dates from the mid-20th century from the analogy of wheels turning, going forward, and making th...
American campus slang for the toilet bowl, more specifically, to be on the big white telephone is to be drunkenly sick in the toilet, dates from the 1...
see See the big/bigger picture
This expression means that one has better, more important things to do and first appears in English as “other fish to fry” in Peter Motteux’s c. 1700-...