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
Dip / put / stick one’s toe / toes in the water

A metaphor that means to try something new or start a new project cautiously without over-commitment or too much risk. It dates from about the 1950s,...

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Dip one’s wick

British slang from the early 20th century for a man to have sex, derives from rhyming slang Hampton Wick/prick.


Dirt poor

Extremely poor with minimal income and assets, an American expression that dates from the 1930s, from the obvious allusion that poor people usually li...

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Dirty laundry/linen

Dirty laundry or linen, sometimes in the form of washing or airing one’s dirty laundry or linen in public, is a metaphor for personal secrets or scand...

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Disappear into thin air

see Into thin air


Disaster

The etymological root of this word is from astrology; dis + aster, from the Latin dis signifying a negative and astrum, a star. Thus, a disaster was o...

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Disc jockey

This American expression for announcers/broadcasters of radio music is thought to have first appeared in print in Variety magazine in 1941. Other sour...

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Discretion is the better part of valour

This comes from Shakespeare Henry IV Part I, Act V, Scene IV, “The better part of valour is discretion.”


Dish fit for the gods

Any offering, food etc, of exceptional quality, was coined by Shakespeare in Julius Caesar (1599). It was spoken by Brutus describing how the conspira...

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Divvy/divvy up

Originally US slang, an abbreviation of 'dividend', dating from around 1877, meaning a share in something or other. Can also be used as a verb as in...

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Dixie

Dixie or Dixieland is an American expression, which means the Southern states of America, particularly those who fought for the Confederacy in the US...

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Do a bunk

British slang from the mid-19th century meaning to run away or depart hastily, derives from bunk meaning to decamp or camp out i.e. to sleep in a bunk...

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Do a duck

see Duck/ducks


Do a runner

British criminal jargon dates from the 1970s to leave an establishment, a restaurant, bar etc without paying.


Do as I say, not as I do

This is attributed to John Selden (1584-1654) who wrote a treatise on Preaching. “Preachers say, ‘Do as I say, not as I do.’”


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