A-Z Database

A-Z Database

All A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Play gooseberry

see Gooseberry


Play hardball

To play hardball is to act in a ruthless and uncompromising way, an American colloquialism that dates from the late 19th century and derives from base...

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Play hookey/hooky

see Hookey/hooky


Play it again, Sam

This catchphrase was never actually said by either Ingrid Bergman or Humphrey Bogart in the movie Casablanca (1942). As a misquotation it has become m...

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Play it by ear

To play a musical piece by ear is to play it without recourse to a written sheet of music and dates from the early 19th century. More recently, from a...

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Play out of one’s skin

To play out of one’s skin is to perform exceedingly well, beyond one’s normal capabilities or limits, where ‘skin’ is used metaphorically for such lim...

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Play possum

To play possum is to lie low, feign ignorance or inattention, with intent to deceive. In extreme situations it also means to feign death. It is an Ame...

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Play second fiddle

To play second fiddle is to adopt a subsidiary role in deference to someone else and dates in this sense dates from the early 19th century. It derives...

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Play the giddy goat

see Act the giddy goat


Playing fields of Eton

see Won on the playing fields of Eton


Pleased as Punch

Punch, as in a Punch and Judy Show, is an abbreviation of Punchinello who was the prototype and principal character of a traditional Italian puppet sh...

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Plonk

Mainly British, Australian and New Zealand informal for cheap, average quality wine. The expression originated amongst Australian soldiers during WWI...

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Plonker

Eric Partridge has this as British slang for penis from c. 1917. During the 1970s, it acquired its less offensive meaning of a stupid, inept person an...

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Plot thickens

The plot thickens is a cliché that is used ironically or half-humorously to signify that a state of affairs is becoming more involved, complex or myst...

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Plough a lone/lonely (or one’s own) furrow

Its figurative meaning is to follow a course of action where one is isolated or acts independently and dates from the late 18th/early 19th century.


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