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
Bone-dry

Means utterly dry; dates from the early 19th century. From at least the 14th century, “to the bone” meant to the very extremity. The literal concept o...

Read More


Bone-idle

Bone-idle means utterly or extremely lazy; dates from the early 19th century, probably from lazybones, which is very much older, from the late 16th ce...

Read More


Bone/Boner

Bone has been slang for an erect penis since the mid-19th century. Boner is simply a more modern American version of the same phenomenon from the 1950...

Read More


Bonk

To have sexual intercourse dates from the 1970s and thereafter became a vogue word, which appeared liberally in the press and broadcast media. The ori...

Read More


Bonkers

Bonkers meaning crazy or mad is British slang from the mid-20th century. It is often used with intensifiers as in “stark raving bonkers”. Its origin i...

Read More


Boo to a goose

see Not say boo to a goose


Boob/boobs

The first known meaning of ‘boob’ is American from c. 1907 where a ‘boob’ is an awkward, stupid person or a simpleton. In this sense it is an abbrevia...

Read More


Booby trap/prize

Since the First World War, a booby trap has come to mean a lethal explosive device triggered by touching or moving a seemingly harmless object. Before...

Read More


Boodle

Boodle is originally American colloquial for a large quantity, especially money with the connotation of graft or illegal money. It dates from the earl...

Read More


Boondocks

This is American slang from the early 20th century for an isolated, remote region, the sticks or the middle of nowhere. It was a word originally picke...

Read More


Boot (a computer)

see Re-boot


Boot (of a motor car)

It is obliquely related to the boot one wears on the feet because from the early 1600s it referred to part of a horse-drawn coach, a sort of running b...

Read More


Bootlegger

A maker or distributor of illicit alcohol, an American expression dates from the late 19th century, so-called because flasks of alcohol were once smug...

Read More


Booty

Plunder or spoils of war, but why is it called booty? Simply because it derives from Old Norse byta meaning to deal out, exchange or share, which of c...

Read More


Booze

‘Booze’, which is slang for alcoholic liquor or to drink heavily is first cited in Middle English during the 14th century, but the spelling was ‘bouse...

Read More


back to top