A-Z Database
To give someone a goose or to goose them is to give a playful prod in the backside with one’s finger. The expression is first attested in the late 19t...
Rhyming slang, goose and duck/fuck, dates from the late 19th century, hence sometimes used in the context of a good goose.
To have goose bumps is a way of expressing that familiar tingling sensation on the skin that can indicate fear, pleasure, or excitement. It is simply...
see Cook someone’s goose
To play gooseberry in the sense of being a superfluous or unwanted third person dates from the early 19th century when gooseberry was a term for a cha...
see Blimey
This is a popular euphemism, also known as a minced oath, for Gor blimey and other oaths starting with the word God. It dates from the early 20th cent...
This common, everyday exclamation of surprise has been in use since the mid-19th century. Not many people who use it realise that it is a euphonic for...
see Watch someone’s back
British slang for the boss, or a form of address for an unknown man, dates from the early 19th century, and sometimes shortened to 'guv'ner' or just '...
Mild expletives of surprise, wonderment, or incredulity that date from the early 19th century.
Originally from the game of Whist or Bridge where to win all 13 tricks on offer is called a grand slam. This usage is first attested from the early 19...
A badly tied knot that is liable to jam, a naval expression that dates from the 1860s. Perjorative in the sense that it could have been tied by one's...
To hear something on the grapevine is an American metaphor for informal, word-of-mouth communication that dates from the mid-19th century with the all...
see Clutch/grasp at straws