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
Burnt offering

From earliest times, sacrifices have been made to religious deities in the form of ritual burning of animals and other possessions as an act of revere...

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Burst one’s sides laughing

see Split one’s sides laughing


Burst out laughing

To suddenly and effusively start to laugh, dates from the early 1700s.


Burst someone’s bubble

There is evidence to suggest that people, and children especially, have been blowing soap bubbles for millennia. The Babylonians were making soap in 2...

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Bursting at the seams

A metaphor that is generally used to describe over-crowding dates from the early 20th century and derives from the obvious allusion to an over-tight g...

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Burton

see Gone for a Burton


Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee

This is the last line of a poem by American poet Stephen Vincent Benét (1898-1943) titled American Names written in 1929. It was also the title of a b...

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Bury one’s head in the sand

This expression meaning to refuse to confront or acknowledge a problem has been around since the early 17th century and comes from the mistaken belief...

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Bury the hatchet

This expression meaning to settle one’s differences with erstwhile adversaries has been around since the 17th century and comes from the practice of N...

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Bus

Bus is an abreviation of omnibus and dates from 1832. Back in the 1820s, an omnibus was public, horse-drawn transport. When motorised transport replac...

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Bush

Slang for pubic hair since the mid-19th century. Bush is now Standard English for the wilds or outback, but was originally an Australian colloquialism...

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Bushed

Bushed meaning tired or exhausted, derives from the allusion to spending time lost in the bush or outback, which, of course, is exhausting, dates from...

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Bushwhack/bushwhackers

During the early 19th century, the original bushwhackers in America, and then later in Australia, were pioneers who literally ‘whacked bushes’ to esta...

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Business

Euphemism for defecation, coined in Victorian times, during the mid-19th century, to describe the defecation of children and domestic pets like cats a...

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Business end

American expression for the effective or practical part of something. For example, the business end of a gun would be the end from which the bullet em...

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