A-Z Database
Rhyming slang for the sun, currant bun/sun, sometimes also used for son; dates from the 1930s.
This expression has nothing whatsoever to do with Indian food. In The Middle Ages, curry meant to prepare, groom and equip horses, from the Old French...
Originally, from the late 19th century, c. 1886, a curtain raiser was a short, one-act play that preceded the main play in the theatre. Now it has com...
When we say it's curtains for someone or something, it means the end, demise, and sometimes the death of someone. Curtains used in this sense dates fr...
British army slang for an easy job or task dates from the First World War c. 1915 and derives from the Hindi khuzh meaning pleasant.
Cut meaning to cut a pack of playing cards dates from 1598. Cut meaning drunk is British slang and dates from the mid-17th century. Half-cut is, of co...
see Dash/Dasher/Dashing
To effect a showy, striking presence that is much admired, similar to cut a dash. The first citation is 1740 in a book by British author Samuel Boyse...
American slang for dance is first attested from 1942.
Cut is used here in the sense of a measure, level or a stage. In the old days, notches or cuts made at intervals along a piece of wood were used as me...
Means completed and pre-arranged with the connotation of lack of spontaneity and freshness. The expression dates from the 18th century and derives per...
Cut and run was originally a nautical expression from the 18th century meaning to cut the anchor rope, without waiting to haul the anchor in, and make...
A spirited contest with rapid changes of advantage, cut and thrust is one of those fencing terms that have made their way into the language of debate...
To do so something in the easiest, fastest, or cheapest way, but not necessarily in the best way, dates from the late 19th century. It derives from th...
To cut someone as in to ignore them totally dates from the 17th century. The intensification to cut someone dead is from the early 19th century.