A - Z Database
This is work done for the sheer pleasure of it, without seeking payment or reward. The source is the New Testament Thessalonians I, 1:3, “Remembering...
Devoid of brightness or quality; coined by Shakespeare to describe the eyes in As You Like it (1600) Act II, Scene V “looking on it with lack-lustre e...
An adjective used to describe someone as lethargic or listless, which dates from the late 18th century. This in turn derives from a much earlier expre...
A loan word from the French laquais meaning a footman or valet and in this sense dates from the mid-1500s. From the 1600s onwards is used figuratively...
British informal and is the female equivalent of behaving in a laddish manner. It dates from the 1990s. See Laddish.
British informal for uncouth, rowdy, boisterous and describes the unruly behaviour of young male adolescents. It derives from the concept of being one...
Celebratory shout at soccer matches in South Africa when a goal has been scored. It is in fact Zulu, meaning ‘it thunders’.
see Lord and Lady Muck
see Easy virtue
see Gentleman of leisure
Almost everyone knows this refers to Florence Nightingale (1820-1910) the famous nurse who tended the wounded and the infirm during the Crimean War. T...
see On the lam
see Like a lamb to the slaughter
A lame duck is an ineffectual, weak person and the expression dates from the late 1500s. It was also stockbroker slang from the 1760s for a defaulter....
The lowest non-commissioned officer rank in the British army, below that of corporal, dates from the early 1600s. The lance prefix is a relic from the...