A-Z Database
see Gooseberry
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...
see Hookey/hooky
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...
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...
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...
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...
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...
see Act the giddy goat
see Won on the playing fields of Eton
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...
Mainly British, Australian and New Zealand informal for cheap, average quality wine. The expression originated amongst Australian soldiers during WWI...
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...
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...
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.