A-Z Database

A-Z Database

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Stuff and nonsense

Usually in the form of an exclamation, that means rubbish, foolishness or absurdity, dates from the mid-18th century.


Stuff up/stuffed

Originally, to stuff is British slang from the early 19th century meaning to have sexual intercourse. It was first used as a euphemism for the f word,...

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Stuffed shirt

A pompous, dislikeable person derives from the notion of shirt stuffed with straw, a bit like a scarecrow, rather than a real person. The expression i...

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Stumped

To be stumped is to be at a loss or nonplussed is originally an American colloquialism that dates from the late 18th early/19th century but is now par...

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Stupid boy

Captain Mainwaring, played by Arthur Lowe, used this catchphrase to castigate young Pike, one of his Home Guard retinue, in almost every episode of th...

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Suck it and see

A British expression that means to try something or other and see what happens, and derives from the allusion to sucking a sweet, candy, or lollipop t...

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Suck the hind tit

To suck the hind tit is to get the worst of a situation and is American from the early 20th century, from the allusion to the runt in a litter that al...

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Suck up to

To suck up to someone means to ingratiate oneself and is schoolboy slang from the mid-19th century. Some sources maintain its origin is linked to suck...

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Sucker

The original meaning is a young mammal before it is weaned dates from The Middle Ages. As in the figurative sense of someone who is easily deceived, p...

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Sucks

see Suck the hind tit


Suffer fools gladly

see Not suffer fools gladly


Suffer in silence

“Great souls suffer in silence” is from the play Don Carlos by Schiller written in 1787. The OED, however, dates the expression in English from only t...

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Suffer little children

The actual quotation is “suffer the little children to come unto me” from the New Testament Mark 10:14 from the late medieval sense of suffer meaning...

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Suffer the slings and arrows of misfortune

Shakespeare’s famous metaphor for the downside of life is part of Hamlet’s even more famous soliloquy, to be or not to be from Hamlet (c.1600) Act III...

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Sugar daddy

An older man who spends money on younger women in return for sex/companionship dates from the early 20th century and is American in origin. The allusi...

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