A-Z Database
see Not by a long chalk
see Not by a long shot
see Streets ahead
see By/to/within a hair’s breadth/whisker
Certainly or for sure, dates from the 15th century where means signifies methods. Thus, if something can be done by any manner or sort of method, it s...
In the 1400s, by and by meant a succession of things or events, one by one or one after another but by the 16th century it came to mean before long or...
This odd expression, which means ‘largely’, ‘mostly’, or ‘in general’ has become something of a meaningless cliché these days, but this was not always...
Dint is an Old English word for a blow or a strike from before the 12th century now only found in the phrase by dint of, which means by force of. This...
see Fair means or foul
see Fits and starts
A minced oath for by God dates from the early 1600s.
British colloquial expression that is in fact a euphemism or minced oath for by God dates from the early 19th century; sometimes appears in the form o...
Recite or know something from memory dates from the 1300s, deriving from the very old notion that the heart was the seat of not only emotions but also...
A very old expression dates from the 14th century. Misguidedly, it has come to mean by fair means or foul because the word crook is mistakenly associa...
By Jove and by Jupiter are mild oaths that have been in use since the 16th century. Jove is an alternative form of Jupiter, the principal Roman God wh...