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Where does the expression say what come from?
The word say has its origins in Old English, it is of Germanic origin and is related to the Dutch word “zeggen” and the German word “sagen”. The expression “say what” has only recently gained popularity. According to popular opinion, using the phrase will make you look like an idiot.
Where did aint originate?
Ain’t apparently begins as amn’t, a contraction for am not, which you can still hear in Ireland and Scotland today. Ain’t is recorded in the early 1700s, with amn’t found a century before. Ain’t is also influenced by aren’t, the contraction for are not recorded in the late 1600s.
Where does the expression get in come from?
It originally came from football (when someone scored a goal they would yell ‘get in’ but now it also represents when something else great happens e.g. winning a raffle ‘get in’ or rocking up to a party and there being heaps of hot girls and booze. I’ve heard guys say get in, in those instances as well.
Why do British say im scared?
But by the early 1600s, according to the Oxford English Dictionary, the expression “I am afraid” (or “I’m afraid”) was being used in the apologetic sense you’re asking about. The OED says “I’m afraid” here means “I regret to say,” “I apologetically report,” “I suspect,” “I am inclined to think,” and so on.
Why is it say uncle?
One theory is that it derives from a phrase uttered by youngsters in the Roman empire who got into trouble, patrue mi patruissime (“uncle, my best of uncles”). It may also be based on a joke from 19th-century England about a bullied parrot being coaxed to address his owner’s uncle.
Why do we say aint?
It was originally a contraction for am not and are not and was written an’t and a’n’t. For example, you can write we’re not or we aren’t, they’re not or they aren’t, and you’re not or you aren’t.
Who made the word aint?
1706, originally a contraction of am not, and in proper use with that sense until it began to be used as a generic contraction for are not, is not, etc., in early 19c. Cockney dialect of London; popularized by representations of this in Dickens, etc., which led to the word being banished from correct English.
What does I’m afraid yes mean?
used for politely telling someone something that might make them sad, disappointed, or angry, for example when you cannot do what they want or do not agree with them.
Where does the word ” no ” come from?
Origin: This one’s a bit tricky, as there is no clear-cut answer. The consensus is, however, that this is most likely derived from an ancient Greek voting process, which involved beans. People would vote by placing one of two colored beans in a vase, white typically meaning yes and black or brown meaning no.
What does’i’m not crying, you’re crying’mean?
Comment on article: “I’m not crying, you’re crying.” Not heard this one, but would interpret it as something like ‘I’m not the injured party – you are’. This phrase is newer slang, that is actually meant to express the opposite.
Where did the phrase Ahoy There come from?
Phrases coined by Shakespeare – The Bard of Avon, he gave us more words and expressions than anyone else. Nautical phrases Ahoy there, me hearties, here’s the language that came from our nautical friends. Phrases from the Bible – the single book that has given more sayings, idioms and proverbs to the English language than any other.
Where did the phrase ” I’m your huckleberry ” come from?
I’m your huckleberry.” During the early 1800s, this idiom derived from the name of a wild blue to black colored berry, similar to the blueberry, the huckleberry, which grows primarily in the southeast of the United States. Huckleberries, since they are so small, came to be used figuratively to describe anything minor or of little importance.