A - Z Database

A - Z Database

Close shave

A close or near shave is a narrow escape from some calamity or other, deriving from shave as in a slight or passing touch. This meaning and usage of s...

Read More


Close to the bone

See Near / close to the bone / knuckle


Closed book

A closed book is a person or a subject, about which one knows very little. It can also mean a subject, which is taboo or has been terminated. The expr...

Read More


Clot

see Clodhopper


Cloth ears

British informal expression for someone who does not listen or understand clearly. It dates from the late 19th century and may derive from the cotton...

Read More


Clothes-horse

A horse is a term for any frame or structure on which something is mounted or supported and dates from the early 18th century, so-called because it ha...

Read More


Cloud cuckoo land

Was the name coined by Aristophanes in his play Birds in 414 BC In the play, two characters turn into birds and plan a city that was never constructed...

Read More


Cloud nine

To be on cloud nine is to be blissfully happy; an American expression that dates from the mid-20th century. Like other ‘nine’ expressions e.g. dressed...

Read More


Cluster fuck

American slang for an unholy mess dates from the 1970s and is thought to have derived from the US military during the Vietnam War, from the use of clu...

Read More


Clutch/grasp at straws

This expression in its various forms dates from the 1500s and in full would be ‘a drowning man will clutch/grasp at straws’. It signifies a weak or fu...

Read More


Coals to Newcastle

The complete expression is to carry coals to Newcastle, which is the equivalent of embarking upon a useless or pointless undertaking. Newcastle-upon-T...

Read More


Coast

As in to proceed without effort e.g. to coast through school or college; dates from the early 20th century. Etymologically, it derives from its origin...

Read More


Coast is clear

This expression meaning one may proceed without any obstacle or impediment was first used figuratively by Michael Drayton (1563-1631) in a poem entitl...

Read More


Coaster

Coaster as in a small tablemat for drinks or bottles first made its appearance during the 19th century. It derives from the sailing vessel that keeps...

Read More


Coat of paint

This expression sounds most odd in the context of coat meaning an outer garment, but by the 17th century, a coating had become a layer of any substanc...

Read More