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  • idioms - Etymology of nick in, in the nick of time? - English . . .
    To nick it down for instance meant 'to record something' and to nick the nick, 'to hit the right time' for something In the nick of time is the only extant expression It probably has sporting origins Team scores were notched up on nick-sticks and when a winning goal or goal was scored just before the end of the contest it was "in the nick of
  • Meanings of word nick in British English
    Word nick seems to be used to describe many things According to the dictionary, the main meanings are: a small notch, groove, chip, or the like, cut into or existing in something a hollow place
  • Where does the phrase in good nick come from?
    The term "in good nick" meaning "in a good condition" came up in conversation and I realised I had no idea where it came from Searching online seems surprisingly fruitless- there are several roo
  • etymology - Use of Holocaust in The Great Gatsby - English Language . . .
    The final sentence of Chapter 8 of The Great Gatsby: "It was after we started with Gatsby toward the house that the gardner saw Wilson's body a little way off in the grass, and the holocaust was
  • Whats the difference between a nook and a cranny?
    Many U S readers over 40, upon hearing the term "nooks crannies," will immediately be reminded of an old tagline for Thomas' English muffins: with lots of nooks and crannies to hold the melted butter Until today, I thought that phrase was mere adspeak; I didn't realize it was a closely guarded trade secret
  • Origin of spick and span - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    It doesn't come from a derogatory term It appears to be a combination of two terms that mean new Span came from Old Norse and spick came from Dutch ORIGIN late 16th cent (in the sense ‘brand new’): from spick and span new, emphatic extension of dialect span new, from Old Norse spán-nýr, from spánn ‘chip’ + nýr ‘new’; spick influenced by Dutch spiksplinternieuw, literally
  • Why is the English devil old?
    Why did the English and Americans freely adopt "old" to describe Satan and not God? Were the nicknames Old Nick, Old Bogey, Old Scratch etc meant to be jocular, fearful or derogatory in nature? Did the word old have different connotations before the 19th century? And finally, when was the adjective old first used as a nickname for the devil?
  • etymology - Was Knick knack an actual game? - English Language Usage . . .
    The question includes a link to the Wikipedia article on the nursery rhyme song "This Old Man," which (it seems to me) constitutes a show of research The Wikipedia article delves into the history of the song, but it doesn't have any pertinent information on what "playing knick-knack" means It seems to me that the prerequisite to include research is now satisfied, and that, accordingly, the
  • colloquialisms - Why are detectives investigators referred to as . . .
    Why are detectives inspectors colloquially referred to as Gumshoes? Is it anything other that they would travel a lot in investigations and, presumably, wore hard-wearing shoes?
  • etymology - Origin of cooter meaning vagina - English Language . . .
    Connie Clare Eble, a professor of English at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and scholar of slang, compiles annual examples of student slang words The earliest entry for cooter, via Green's Dictionary of Slang, is from fall 1977 cooter female; used strictly by athletes; cooter madness – girl crazy From there, cooter or cooder meaning vagina is attested from 1986, probably





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