A - Z Database

A - Z Database

Storm

The figurative use of this word as in 'cooking up a storm', or as Jerry Lee Lewis once sang, 'loving up a storm', is American from as long ago as the...

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Storm in a teacup

This figurative expression meaning to blow something out of proportion dates in this form from the early 19th century, but the concept itself is a ver...

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Straight

A straight as in a straight flush in poker is attested from c.1840. To take an alcoholic drink straight or straight up, without a mixer, water, soda e...

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Straight and narrow

The straight and narrow is the conventional or law-abiding route, although one would be excused for spelling it ‘strait’ and narrow because that was t...

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Straight as a die

Die is the singular of dice, but from the late 1600s, a die was also a stamp or a mechanical device for shaping metals, coins etc. It is this meaning...

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Straight from the horse’s mouth

From the highest authority or from the best source, this was originally an American expression first cited from the early 20th century. In horseracing...

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Straight from the shoulder

Straight from the shoulder means direct, forceful, honest talk or opinion and dates in this sense from the late 19th century. The origin is pugilism w...

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Straight out

To come straight out with something is to tell it like it is with no restraints and is an American expression that dates from 1840.


Strait-laced

According to the OED, strait-laced is descriptive of persons “excessively rigid or scrupulous in matters of conduct; over-precise; prudish” and dates...

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Straw that broke the camel’s back

see Last/final straw


Straws, clutching/grasping at

see Clutch/grasp at straws


Streamline/streamlined

In its modern sense, this technical term from hydrodynamics makes its appearance in the late 19th century where it was first used to describe how flui...

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Streets ahead

Streets ahead means far superior and is first attested in this sense as a colloquial expression dating from 1856. To win by a street, meaning a comfor...

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Strength to strength

Go from strength to strength is to grow stronger and stronger. The origin is the Bible Psalms 84:7 “They grow from strength to strength.”


Stretch of the imagination

see By no/not by any stretch of the imagination