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  • What does coll mean? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    What does "coll" mean? [closed] Ask Question Asked 3 years, 11 months ago Modified 3 years, 11 months ago
  • Where does the phrase cool your jets come from?
    The OED says the phrase "cool your jets", meaning to calm down or become less agitated, is originally US and the first quoted in a newspaper: 1973 Daily Tribune (Wisconsin Rapids) 29 Jan 1 1 If you want to cool your jets, just step outside, where it will be about 10 degrees under cloudy skies That use is to literally cool yourself down The first with the usual meaning is a bit later the
  • Mrs and Mmes: plurals of Mrs (missus ˈmɪsəz ) [duplicate]
    Mrs ˈmɪsəz (pl Mrs, Mesdames) A title used before the name(s) of a married woman Collins Concise English Dictionary Mrs was originally, like Miss, an abbreviation of Mistress (the plural of whic
  • Speaking of insults: sod off! meaning and origin
    Here's Eric Partridge from the Dict of Slang and Unconv English: sod A sodomist: low coll : Mid-C 19-20; ob -2 Hence, a pejorative, orig and gen violent: late C 19-20 Often used in ignorance of its origin: cf bugger So your sense of "sod" is on the money Suffixial "off" marks a general epithet as an insult, as seen in "piss off," "f-ck off," "bugger off," etc , all used in the
  • expressions - Why does one scream blue murder? - English Language . . .
    To scream blue murder is to shout loudly and make a huge fuss, sometimes with the implication that the fuss is excessive But does anyone know why murder should be blue?
  • american english - How to pronounce furore furor? - English Language . . .
    I know what the word "furore" means I also know it's a variant spelling of "furor" "furore" seems to be a BrE spelling I've never spoken this word despite how often I've seen it in both its forms
  • Meaning and origin of the word muist
    Montgomerie, Watson's Coll iii 2 Redolent odour vp from the rutis sprent, —Aromaticke gummes, or ony fyne potioun ; Must, myr, aloyes, or confectioun Doug Virgil, Prol 401 43 And adding to that entry, Jameson, A Supplement to the Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language (1825) offers this further note: MUIST, MUST, s
  • When did double superlatives go out of fashion in English?
    1704 J Blair in W S Perry Hist Coll Amer Colonial Church: Virginia (1870) I 135 Aspersed with the most unsuitest imputations as if I had been raising sedition or rebellion 1749 H Fielding Tom Jones vi vi 266 He is the most handsomest, charmingest, finest, tallest, properest Man in the World
  • Did Victorians say “We are quit”? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    Coll ) 309 But now may ye be revenged on hym, for I may nevir by quyte of hym c1480 (1400) St Pelagia 136 in W M Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc Dial (1896) II 208 Haffand rycht gret delyte of þare synnis to be quyte
  • etymology - Origin of the word turnpike - English Language Usage . . .
    A single-bar barrier is the original meaning, referring to medieval verb turnen, meaning "to turn," and the noun pike, meaning "a sharp-tipped weapon A: The word “turnpike” dates back to 1420, according to the Barnhart Concise Dictionary of Etymology It originally referred to a spiked barrier designed to restrict access to a road It comes from the Middle English “turnen” (to turn





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