A-Z Database
Same old, same old' is an informal way of expressing that one's life and circumstances in general have not changed, and are repeatedly routine and ord...
To sandbag someone is American slang for putting someone in dire or disastrous circumstances. This figurative meaning dates from the late 19th century...
The allusion is to the hourglass filled with sand by which time used to be measured. The history of the hourglass is obscure. Some say it dates back t...
The ubiquitous food snack comprising slices of bread between which a variety of fillings are placed is named after John Montagu, the 4th Earl of Sandw...
Meaning a fool or simpleton is from the early 19th century and is short for the older and now obsolete expressions ‘sap-skull’ or ‘sap-head’, which da...
Literally, a sapper is one who digs a sap, which is a trench or tunnel. A sapper is a private in the Corps of Royal Engineers, a rank that was first i...
British slang, an abbreviation for sandwich as in, for example, 'a bacon sarnie'. It dates from 1961, according to the OED. For some unknown reason, a...
see Days of the week
US slang for alcohol, dates from c. 1940.
see What’s good for the goose is good for the gander
As a noun or adjective meaning impertinent, naughty or cheeky, it has been used figuratively in this way since the early 1500s, derives from the conce...
Rhyming slang for cash, sausage and mash/cash, dates from c. 1870, according to Eric Partridge, and has evolved into the expression not a sausage whic...
Slang/vulgar expression from the late 20th century for vagina. See also Hide the sausage
To save someone’s bacon is to rescue someone from harm. It dates from the mid-1600s when a side of bacon was a precious commodity in a household and w...
This expression has come to be used figuratively as a last-minute rescue from some misfortune. Its origin is from boxing during the 19th century and h...