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fredpuli47

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fredpuli47
Why and when was it decided to end the financial year in Spring; since the adoption of the Gregorian calendar now April 5th; when the calendar year ends on December 31st ?
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fredpuli47
In bridge and some other gamess, a rubber is a term for a set of matches, the winner of most being said "to have won the rubber". The Shorter Oxford is not much help, saying that, perhaps,'...
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fredpuli47
"It's a double whammy". Who coined this expression? How old is it? And what's a whammy?
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fredpuli47
How old is the expression 'the coast is clear ' meaning it's safe to do something because there's nobody about ? What did it refer to at first? For example, it sounds as though it was said by...
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fredpuli47
When were Members of Parliament first paid a salary for being Members? How does the present salary of an MP compare with their salary in 1950, 1900, and 1850 and/ or the year of its introduction, when...
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fredpuli47
How did the words 'draw' and 'drawn' in ' a draw' and 'drawn game' come to mean a match ending in nobody being the winner? The Shorter Oxford Dictionary says the expression was originally 'a draw...
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fredpuli47
What's the origin of 'souped up' as in ' it was a souped up Ford' meaning a Ford which had been modified to make the engine more powerful ?
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fredpuli47
When did the expression 'to cherry-pick', meaning to select only the bits of a document or account which is favourable to your argument ,first come into use ? And what does it refer to ? Are cherries...
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fredpuli47
A 'house spider' has just appeared in the house. What's the best way to ensure its survival? Is it best to put it outside in the garden or to put it in a barn or the garage or just leave it to its own...
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fredpuli47
The Great Fire of London destroyed 87 churches. How many churches were there in the City before the Fire?( All I can find is a lot of stuff about how many were replaced or restored).
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fredpuli47
When did the expression ' I kid you not ' come into common use ? Was it someone's catch-phrase ?
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fredpuli47
What's the origin of 'Nope' for ' No' ?
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fredpuli47
'The problems of three little people don't amount to a hill of beans', 'It's not worth a hill of beans' and so on. Can't think that 'hill of beans' was invented by the scriptwriters of Casablanca but...
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fredpuli47
David Cameron has just told the BBC that he does not want anyone to vote for the Lisbon treaty and he has told the Czechs and the Poles what his position is. He then explains that he does not want to...
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fredpuli47
When and where did the expression 'the jury is still out', meaning 'the outcome is uncertain' , first come into use?
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fredpuli47
The vet tells me that a wild animal that is hunted and caught may 'die of shock'. My dogs had cornered a muntjac deer, which I rescued from them. The deer had no obviously serious injury yet passed...
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fredpuli47
In the days of wartime rationing, clothes, blankets etc were marked with symbols that looked like 'C C ',.in art deco writing, to show they were made to government approved standards. Was this really...
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fredpuli47
" Chance would be a fine thing!" is commonly said without 'the' or 'a' at the beginning, which gives the expression an ancient air, as though, in the manner of old writers, Chance is...
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fredpuli47
What's the origin of 'megs' used as a word for teeth ? I've heard 'meggy pegs' too, but my late mother used just 'megs' for teeth, particularly when talking calmingly to her dogs when examining theirs...
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fredpuli47
Was there a fictional murder mystery, solved in the discovery that the butler did it, which gave rise to the saying 'the butler did it' or is the origin of the saying in some jocular mockery of the...

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