A-Z Database

A-Z Database

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Blind someone with science

Mislead or confuse someone by using big, important-sounding words or complex explanations, dates from the 1930s and is originally of Australian origin...

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Blinder

Blinder as in to play a blinder is to give a blinding or dazzling performance, usually in a sporting context, dates from the early 20th century.


Blinding performance

see Blinder


Blindside

As a verb, used mainly in North America, to blindside someone means to shock, surprise and even deceive them. This figurative usage derives from the s...

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Bling/blingy

Ostentatious, showy and generally poor taste, US black origin from the late 1990s and was popularised by the black American rapper BG, Baby Gangsta. I...

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Blinking

Sometimes in the form of ‘blanking’ a mild form of swearing, possibly a euphemism for bloody; dates from the late 19th century.


Blithering

As in the expression “blithering idiot” which is a colloquial expression from the late 19th century. Blithering derives from blither, which is a varia...

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Blitz

Emerged from the Second World War, a shortening of blitzkrieg, which is German for lightning war, the violent, concentrated, tank-led warfare employed...

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Blizzard

Although now part of Standard English for a sustained snowstorm, the word itself is of unknown origin. It first appears in American English during the...

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Blockbuster

This word is now commonly used to describe a movie or any entertainment event that breaks records in terms of its cost or takings, or both. This meani...

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Blockhead

A stupid person dates from the mid-1500s and means wooden head. Only later, from the late 17th century, did it refer to a wooden block resembling a he...

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Blog

Blog is an abbreviation of weblog, which is the posting information, opinions, etc on the worldwide web, and is first attested from c. 1999.


Bloke

British slang for a fellow or a chap dates from the mid-19th century and which the OED says derives from Shelta, the Irish travellers’, tinkers’ and g...

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Blood and guts

Marked by great zeal, determination and violence, as in blood-and-guts movies/novels, blood-and-guts football etc dates from the 1930s. Blood and guts...

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Blood and iron

Military force rather than diplomacy the phrase is attributed to Otto von Bismarck, Chancellor of Germany, when he addressed the Prussian House of Dep...

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