A-Z Database

A-Z Database

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Horse’s arse/ass/backside

A stupid person or sometimes rubbish, nonsense or something of little worth, American slang dates from the early 19th century. The British version is...

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Horse’s mouth

see Straight from the horse’s mouth


Horseplay

Rough, boisterous behaviour; this usage dates from the early 1500s. To horse around derives from horseplay but is of American origin from the early 20...

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Horses for courses

People perform better in some environments than others. The expression is British and derives from horseracing in the late 19th century where horses w...

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Horseshit

Rubbish or nonsense, American slang that dates from the early 19th century, much the same as bullshit. See also For the birds.


Hostages to fortune

Sometimes appears in the form of not being held hostage to fortune which means refusing to be placed in a compromising or perilous situation. The sour...

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Hot

Hot meaning lustful, as 'in heat', dates, according to the OED, from 1500. Hot is also slang for attractive in a sexy way, which lexicographer Jonatho...

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Hot air

see Full of hot air


Hot and bothered

Earliest citations for this expression describing a state of agitation and anxiety are from the 1920s. Therefore, it may well have been coined by Rudy...

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Hot button

To press the hot button or buttons is to accelerate or fast-forward an issue; an American expression that dates from the early 1960s. It also has sexu...

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Hot dinners

To do something more than other people have had hot dinners, is a jocular British idiom that expresses great frequency or wide experience at having ex...

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Hot dog

This famous American snack, a hot, Frankfurter type sausage in a long bread roll has spread all over the world. The name first made its appearance in...

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Hot foot

To set a hot or quick pace, to move quickly, dates from the 1400s.


Hot potato

A hot potato is a contentious or controversial issue that one might drop like a hot potato. Both expressions date from the 1850s.


Hot to trot

Ready, willing and eager to get going, originally for sex and then later by extension for any activity. It derives from US black jive talk in the 1950...

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