Donate SIGN UP

The AnswerBank Articles

121 to 140 of 210

First Previous 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next Last

It isn't over until the fat lady sings

Q. What fat lady And why is she singing A. Used mostly by sports commentators, often in a spirit of reassurance to the supporters of the losing team, the phrase is trotted out to remind people that00:00 Mon 13th Aug 2001

ABC: The alphabet

Q. Where did our alphabet come from A. Our alphabet is called the Latin or Roman alphabet, and it is most widely used alphabetic system in the world, with languages as diverse as Vietnamese in the00:00 Mon 06th Aug 2001

Etcetera: Latin words and phrases in English

Q. Why do we use so many Latin phrases in English A. Even in everyday speech, we use a number of words and phrases taken directly from Latin. Some are modern - 'annus horribilis' (horrible year),00:00 Mon 06th Aug 2001

A dog's dinner : Canine phrases

Q. A dog's what A. In addition to its literal sense, as in dog biscuit, dog is used in combination to denote the male of certain animals (dog ape, dog fox and dog otter); to denote inferior plants00:00 Mon 06th Aug 2001

When does a boat become a ship

A. The determining factors that distinguish boats from ships has evolved over time. The term 'ship' traditionally referred to a sailing vessel having three or more masts. In modern times, however, a00:00 Mon 30th Jul 2001

Some football club names are pretty obvious, but why Leyton 'Orient'

A. The well-known 3rd-division London club was founded in 1881 by members of a cricket club in Hackney so that they could continue playing together in the winter months. In 1888 they adopted the name00:00 Mon 30th Jul 2001

Where does the phrase 'spitting feathers' come from

A. As ssmart has suggested, the phrase 'spitting feathers' quite possibly derives from being rendered speechless with anger, rather like Donald Duck. But how else do we use feathers in sayings Here00:00 Mon 30th Jul 2001

What's new in the dictionary

A. As reported this week (ending 21 July 2001) Oxford University Press has announced the new words included in the Oxford Compact English Dictionary. A total of 67 new words have gone in, and they00:00 Mon 23rd Jul 2001

Should the flag of Great Britain be called the Union Jack or the Union Flag

A. Both are correct. Originally it was called the Union Flag or the Great Union, but most of us today know it as the Union Jack. Q. Why is it so complicated Why don't we have a simple tricolour00:00 Mon 23rd Jul 2001

What's an eponym

A. Xerox is, for starters. An eponym is someone or something whose name is or is thought to be the source of something's name. So Romulus, the mythical founder of Rome, is the eponym of the city he00:00 Mon 23rd Jul 2001

What is Utopia

A. The dictionary definition is an imaginary and indefinitely remote place or a place of idealist perfection, especially in laws, government and social conditions. By extension, it has also come to00:00 Mon 16th Jul 2001

What is a red-letter day

A. Red-letter days were originally the holy days and saints' days indicated in early ecclesiastical calendars by letters marked in red ink. So, by extension, a red-letter day is a special day, one to00:00 Mon 16th Jul 2001

What is the water of life

A. Eau de vie, aquavit, uisce beathadh or uisge beatha, all are synonymous with the water of life - an English translation of the medieval Latin aqua vitae, and a rather poetic way of referring to00:00 Mon 16th Jul 2001

How do we misuse the word 'ethnic'

Q. Can foods be 'ethnic', asks janelh A. In a word, no. It's a lazy - and incorrect - way that supermarkets (in the case of this question) denote 'non-British' foodstuffs. What they mean is 'food00:00 Mon 09th Jul 2001

Double Dutch

Q. Spreekt u nederlands A. Unless you've lived in Holland or Flemish-speaking Belgium or have a parent from either of those countries, the chances are you don't. As any of you who have visited00:00 Mon 09th Jul 2001

White wedding

Q. What is it with wedding anniversaries A. The practice of giving successive wedding anniversaries special names has been with us for quite some time. The idea is that the name designates the type00:00 Mon 09th Jul 2001

What's Welsh for Zen

Q. Ydych chi'n siarad Cymraeg A. If so, you have access to one of the oldest living languages in Europe, and certainly the one with the longest continuous history on the island of Great Britain,00:00 Mon 02nd Jul 2001

Hey Joe: How do we use the name 'Joe' in sayings

Q. Joe Public Why Joe A. Good question. Although Joseph has always been a popular name, it's never had the the same degree of ubiqitty in the English-speaking world as John or William. John, Jack00:00 Mon 02nd Jul 2001

McNonsense TM: What's the McEmpire up to now

A. Yes, they've McDone it again. The corporate bigwigs of the New World Order, McDonald's Department, have listed 131 words and phrases to which they claim ownership. From 'did somebody say' to 'when00:00 Mon 02nd Jul 2001

Why is the word abbreviate so long

A. There's no reason why words should necessarily reflect in some way the concept they express. Unless, of course, like whistle or splash, a word is an onomatopoeia - something onomatopoeia is not in00:00 Mon 25th Jun 2001

121 to 140 of 210

First Previous 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next Last