A-Z Database
Hang in means to persist with something despite adversity, is originally American and dates from the 1960s.
Hang out means to frequent, stay at a place, or reside, is originally American and dates from the early 19th century.
Call it a day; to finish work, sometimes to retire from work, is originally an American expression that dates from the 19th century. American men were...
A hang-dog look is a furtive, guilty or apologetic expression on someone’s face and dates in this sense from the late 1600s. In those days, a dog refe...
Hang-up as in a psychological fixation is American from the late 1950s, whereas to hang up the phone dates from the early 1900s.
Hang as in to spend time or relax, is American teen slang from the late 1950s. To 'get the hang of something' is also American from c. 1834 meaning to...
As in, hanged if I know, dates from the 16th century, a synonym for damned if I know. Hanged or damned sounds fairly terminal either way.
see Sword of Damocles
see Sword of Damocles
This word for the adverse after-effects of alcohol is owed to the Americans who first began using it in the 1890s, from the allusion to something that...
This phrase meaning frivolity, sleight of hand or sexual impropriety dates from the early 19th century and is a reduplication of hanky (short for hand...
This is an American expression that dates from the early 19th century. Some have suggested that when a clam has been opened there is a similarity to a...
An American metaphor for extremely happy, which dates from the mid-19th century. One presumes when pigs are not wallowing in their own filth they like...
Presumably, this rather vulgar expression derives from the observation that pigs are indeed extremely content to wallow in filth of their own making....
Although this expression evokes images of happy children playing in beach sand, that is nor where the expression comes from. Sand boys were employed t...