A-Z Database
To be caught red handed means to be caught in the act, especially of a crime, and dates in this sense from the late 18th/early19th century. To be ‘cau...
A red herring is a ploy to deceive or throw someone off the scent and therein is the derivation, from the training of hunting dogs. In the 17th centur...
American expression dates from the late 19th century for an area of a town or city that houses brothels. Such places were generally characterised by r...
US President Obama’s famous ‘red line’ speech relating to use of chemical weapons in Syria by the Assad regime in 2012, sparked off a debate among ety...
A red mist is a violent outburst of bad temper that temporarily impairs one’s vision and judgment. According to the OED, the phrase dates from the mid...
This expression meaning to provoke or enrage someone dates from the early 19th century. In the 16th century, red rag was slang for the tongue and if a...
Red tape means unnecessary or excessive bureaucracy and dates in this figurative sense from the early 19th century. It derives from the 17th century p...
A red-letter day is a special day to mark a holiday or a celebration and the expression has been used in this way since the 18th century. The origin d...
Term used to describe universities other than Oxford and Cambridge and hence somewhat inferior, although this negative connotation has since largely d...
Young male prostitute; British slang from the early 1980s.
see No respecter of persons
To rest on one’s laurels is to take time out to relax after one’s achievements and successes and dates in this sense from the early 18th century. The...
This rather sinister saying advising that vengeance is more enjoyable when it is cold and calculating was coined by the French writer Pierre Choderlos...
In Britain, this is an everyday exclamation for rubbish or nonsense, usually in response to something that has been said and dates from the early 20th...
see No rhyme or reason