A-Z Database
This expression is used to emphasize that something is definitely not the case or that something is impossible to believe, even after a great deal of...
Both these versions of the same expression emphasize that something is definitely not the case or that something is impossible to believe, even after...
see Go by the board
To do things by the book is to do them correctly, perhaps fastidiously, according to the rules. The expression has been in popular usage since the lat...
This odd expression dates from the 17th century and means incidentally, of secondary importance or off the main track and it is the latter meaning tha...
This expression of surprise, wonderment or shock was coined, it is thought, by Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais, the writers of the BBC (British Broadc...
A somewhat curious expression that variously means 'for the same reason', 'in the same vein', 'by the same meaning', and sometimes simply 'moreover' o...
see Fly by the seat of one’s pants
see Short and curlies
see Short hair/s
This expression first appears in the Geneva Bible (1560), Job 19: 20, when Job says, “I have escaped with the skin of my teeth.” Presumably, Job meant...
Today it means incidentally or in passing and the latter phrase is the clue to its origin from the late Middle Ages when it meant literally to pass so...
This expression from the New Testament has come to mean that one can only truly evaluate someone’s performance by the results delivered. The source is...
A metaphor for a very small margin i.e. the breadth or width of a hair dates from the late 1500s and was used by Shakespeare in Merry Wives of Windsor...
see Let bygones be bygones