A - Z Database
see How do you like them apples?
see Compare apples with apples
see Months of the year
Traditionally the first day in April is known as April Fools’ Day. References and citations for the first of April as April Fools’ Day go back as far...
Rhyming slang for workshop tools, April fools/tools, dates from the late 19th century. In addition, it is also rhyming slang for stools, as in barstoo...
Rhyming slang for flowers, April showers/flowers, dates from the early 20th century.
What is the difference between a bishop and an archbishop? Everyone knows archbishop is the higher rank, but what is the exact significance of the arc...
This apparent rogue word continues to baffle etymologists. It has been in use since 1502 according to the OED, describing a mass of islands surrounded...
This familiar word has been in use since the 16th century and its original meaning was master builder from the Greek archos (ǎρχος) meaning chief or p...
see Argy-bargy
Alternative spellings are argie-bargie and argey-bargey meaning a spat or an argument. It can also be used as a verb. The first part of the expression...
Rhyming slang for bottle, Aristotle/bottle, dates from late 19th century.
see Out of or from the Ark
If something costs an arm and a leg, it means that it is outrageously expensive and therefore perhaps too painful or too exorbitant to pay the price a...
Arm candy is an American expression that dates from the early 1990s for an attractive female escort, someone who looks good on one’s arm. See also ear...