A-Z Database
British slang for a very long time dates from the 1960s, perhaps derived from donkey’s years.
This is a specialist term from the game of cricket. It describes a ball bowled in line with the stumps, landing at the batsman’s feet, with the object...
This retort is usually used in response to a threat that is unlikely or incapable of being carried out. It is uncertain whether the origin is British...
These Americanisms dating from the mid-19th century are short for you can bet on it. They are used mainly in common speech as intensifiers to add assu...
see Take a horse to water
see Have your cake and eat it
‘You never had it so good’ was the slogan of the 1952 US Democrat election campaign. ‘The people of Britain have never had it so good’ was also the sl...
This British catchphrase, which means that one gets what one pays for was coined by Punch magazine in 1846.
see Buck up
The last letter of the alphabet, pronounced ‘zed’ in Britain and Commonwealth Countries but ‘zee’ in America, is also slang for sleep when pluralised...
Zany is a word that has come to mean clownish in an offbeat sort of way. It is a lot older than most realise, dating back to the 16th century, and der...
Zap is an echoic comic strip sound-effect word of American origin that dates from the 1930s, especially featured in Buck Rogers comics. Zap, meaning t...
see Z/Z's
see Z/Z's
A hydrogen-filled German airship, dating from around 1900, named after the German general who perfected it, Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin (1838-1917)....