A-Z Database
American slang for a silly, empty-headed woman dates from the 1920s and derives from the Italian bambino for baby.
see In a bind
Exclamation of surprise, of unknown origin, that dates from the 1920s and was in use before the game of the same name came into being in the 1930s.
An abbreviation of binoculars, British informal since c. 1930 but more often used to mean spectacles or glasses rather than binoculars.
British slang for a woman or girl, usually with derogatory connotations of easy virtue. The origin is Arabic bint meaning girl or daughter. British mi...
Although ‘bird’ is current British slang for a girl or woman, it is far from new. It has been used in this sense from at least the 14th century. “Bird...
Bird brain is US informal for a stupid person, a scatterbrain, a person who lacks the faculties of focus and attention, dates from the 1920s, from the...
‘The bird has flown’ is a metaphor that means someone has departed or escaped, from the obvious allusion to birds leaving the nest or coop, and is fir...
This of course means that an actual advantage (in hand) is worth more than the promise of something greater. This proverb in various forms has been ar...
A view of the landscape from above i.e. the view a bird would have and dates in this literal sense from the late 16th/early 17th century. By the late...
In golf, birdie is a score one under par for an individual hole. The origin is from late 19th century American slang when a bird of a shot meant a gre...
The facts about sex and reproduction as told to children of a certain age. It is not known who actually coined this expression, but the first referenc...
This has been a much sought after delicacy in Chinese cuisine for over 400 years. The nests in question are made from the saliva of two Indonesian spe...
This proverb dates from the 16th century. Early citations in print were often in the form of “birds of a feather fly together” but flock eventually re...
Jocular expression for nakedness, as in ‘the suit’ in which one was born, dates from the early 18th century, c. 1734. It is not known who coined the e...