A - Z Database
This is a polite invocation that variously expresses sympathy, surprise, distress or criticism, very much dependent on the context. Its diminutive, de...
This famous phrase was coined by Benjamin Franklin in 1789 in a letter to Jean Baptiste Leroy. “In this world nothing is certain but death and taxes.”
See O Death where is thy sting?
To be at death’s door is to be at the point of dying, dates from the 17th century.
Synonym for skull dates from the 16th century. Shakespeare uses it in Henry IV Part II, Act II, Scene IV. “Do not speak like a death’s-head; not bid m...
To look or feel like death warmed up is to look or feel very ill. It is a British colloquial expression from the late 1930s and it not known who coine...
see Bunkum/Bunk
see Months of the year
Unit of measurement for the intensity or loudness of sound is one tenth of a bel, dates from 1928 and is named after Alexander Graham Bell, the invent...
The word derives from the Latin decimus, meaning a tenth and derives from the punishment for Roman legions performing badly in battle, which was decim...
As in ‘deck the halls’ means to cover or dress and dates in this sense from the early 1400s. Deck of cards is first attested from the 1590s. Deck as i...
So-called because these chairs were first used on the decks of ocean liners, dates from the late 19th century.
see In the deep end
see Short arms, deep/long pockets.
British military slang from the 19th century for look, as in have or take a dekko at this. Although used as a noun, it derives from the Hindi dekho me...