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
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.’”


Do as you would be done by

This is the more colloquial version of the Biblical “do unto others as you would have them do unto you” that appears in Leviticus 19:18 and elsewhere....

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Do for/do in

see Do/do for/do in


Do me a favour

This expression when used as a catchphrase is principally used to refute or query something and as such generally conveys incredulity. Used in this se...

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Do one’s nut

British slang meaning to get extremely agitated or angry dates from the early 20th century with nut being slang for head, from the allusion of losing...

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Do or die

This expression has had common usage since time immemorial, probably long before it was adopted as a motto by the Barclay family in Norman times and c...

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Do someone in

see Do/do for/do in


Do the business

Do what is required to get the job done, sometimes with unsavoury connotations, British informal from the late 20th century. See also mean business an...

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Do the dirty on someone

An abbreviation of play a dirty trick on someone to treat someone scurrilously dates from the late 17th century.


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