A-Z Database
The word portmanteau dates from the 1500s derives from the French porter to carry and manteau meaning a mantle or cloak. Originally, a portmanteau was...
Posh is a faintly derogative word for upper class and one still meets people who believe that it is an acronym for port out, starboard home relating t...
Modern, 21st century, rhyming slang for sex, Posh and Becks/sex, from Posh Spice and David Beckham.
Means quickly at great speed and derives from the 16th century habit of writing ‘Post Haste’ on the outside of letters that had to be delivered urgent...
This notion of being critical of another when the criticism might apply equally to the criticiser, dates from at least the 1600s when all cooking pots...
Take one’s chance dates from the 1500s and derives from being invited for a meal at the last minute and having to share whatever is in the cooking pot...
Pot meaning to drink is from the 16th century and is a transference of meaning from the pot or vessel in which drink was served. Pot meaning to shoot...
A potboiler is a cheap work of art, book, or movie designed to make quick money. ‘Boiling the pot’ is a late 18th century expression for making a livi...
Pound of flesh is a metaphor for exacting one’s due recompense, no matter what the cost. It was coined by Shakespeare in Merchant of Venice Act IV, Sc...
To be in the pound seats is to be in a very good position with everything going well. It appears to be a South African expression, and derives from th...
see Sterling
These days, this old proverb is seen as more of an environmental disaster but the calming effect of oil on water was known to both the Ancient Greeks...
Express one’s innermost thoughts and feelings, the source is the Bible Psalms 62:8, “Trust in him at all times; ye people, pour out your heart before...
People often talk about the powers that be in an abstract sort of way and mean authorities of some kind. Very few, however, realise that they are quot...
Colloquial English for a car crash, in most cases a minor one. The word is Royal Air force slang c.1940 for a crash but also meant an attack on enemy...