A - Z Database

A - Z Database

Time immemorial

Time immemorial simply means so long ago that it is beyond memory or record. (It is one of the very few phrases in English where the adjective appears...

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Time is a river

see River of time


Time is of the essence

In this context, the phrase ‘of the essence’ means extremely important. Bartlett’s Familiar Quotations maintains the saying itself is anonymous and do...

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Time is money

This well-known expression was coined by Benjamin Franklin in 1748 in his work Advice to a Young Tradesman, “Remember that time is money.”


Time to kill

This expression, in the sense of having excess time at one’s disposal, dates from the late 18th century.


Time will tell

This is a very old aphorism, probably coined by Euripides (485-406 BC) in Aeolus when he wrote, “Time will explain it all.”


Tin Pan Alley

Those wishing to show off can say at the next opportunity that Tin Pan Alley is a synecdochism i.e. a grammatical term where a place name becomes syno...

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Tinker’s damn/curse/cuss

The full form of the expression is something or someone is not worth a tinker’s damn or tinker’s curse or tinker’s cuss. Take your pick. They all mean...

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Tip

In the sense of a gratuity dates from the early 1700s and derives from the act of literally tipping coins into someone’s hands. Tip in the sense of us...

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Tip one’s hand

Reveal one’s plans or intentions, often unintentionally, dates from the mid-19th century; an American expression that derives from accidentally tippin...

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Tip of the iceberg

This a metaphor for the smaller, perceptible part of something, especially a problem or difficulty, which is in fact much greater. According to the OE...

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Tip someone the wink

To tip someone the wink is defined by the OED as a glance or significant movement of the eye, often accompanied by a nod, expressing command, assent,...

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Tipping point

The tipping point, sometimes known as the moment of critical mass, is the critical point in a situation, process, or system when a significant and oft...

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Tip-top

Tip-top in the sense of the highest point or pinnacle dates from the late 16th/early 17th century but in the sense of finest quality dates from the mi...

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Tipple

To tipple originally meant to sell liquor and is first cited in the year 1500. By 1547, tippling-houses were places where liquor was sold and consumed...

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