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
Sun is over the yardarm

Sun is over the yard arm is a British expression dating from the late 19th century that means it is time for the first alcoholic drink of the day. The...

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Sunday

see Days of the week


Sunday best

One’s very best clothes, so-called because they were worn to church on a Sunday, dates from the early 1600s.


Sunday punch

A Sunday punch is a boxer’s very best punch, usually a knockout blow, and dates from c. 1915 and probably derives from Sunday best in the sense of sav...

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Surf n’Turf

An American idiom from the 1960s and still in use today that describes a fairly downmarket type of cuisine, usually associated with steakhouses, where...

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Surfing the Internet

This common and well-known expression that means browsing or searching for information on the Internet was coined by an American librarian at the Univ...

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Surrey glide

see Chinese cut


Suss

Suss as in to suss something out or to have something sussed, derives from an abbreviation of the word suspect. It was originally underworld/police sl...

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Swallow does not make a summer

see One swallow does not make a summer


Swan song

The fable that swans sing shortly before their death is extremely ancient. Plato (c.428-438 BC) makes mention of it in his Dialogues, as does Chaucer...

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Swannee

see Down/up the swannee


Swashbuckling

These days, it is an adjective mostly used to describe a genre of action-adventure films involving period costume and sword fighting. The films of Dou...

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SWAT

SWAT is an acronym for Special Weapons and Tactics. SWAT teams are elite paramilitary units employed by US law enforcement departments. The first SWAT...

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Swear blind

To swear blind is first cited from the early 20th century and means to swear that something is true, emphatically and vehemently. Blind here is used a...

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Swear like a trooper

To use bad language excessively; dates from the early 18th century. Cavalrymen, especially non-commissioned troopers, were notorious for their coarse...

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