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  • How did the phrase are you nuts come about?
    But allied senses of nuts involving infatuation or being out of one's normal mind go back at least to the mid-19th century and perhaps (in the former case) to the late 18th century I suspect that the intertwining meanings of nuts strongly influenced each other, which makes pinning down the exact date of emergence of the "insane" sense of the
  • Origin of deez nuts - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Deez nuts is a phrase that originated from the song "Deeez Nuuuts" on Dr Dre's original album "The Chronic", released in 1992 (www chacha com) Also, incomplete: Cassell's Dictionary of Slang - Page 393 Jonathon Green - 2005 deez (nuts) n [1990s+] (US Black) the testicles; the male genitals
  • From Soup to Nuts - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Judith Siefring, Oxford Dictionary of Idioms, second edition (2004) says that the "soup to nuts" form of the expression originated in North America: from soup to nuts from beginning to end; completely North American informal Soup is likely to to feature as the first course of a formal meal, while a selection of nuts may be offered as the
  • How nutty are the terms nut case, health nut and sports nut?
    Nut is slang for head And nut case means head case; i e, mind brain injury illness It's a pretty obvious metaphor: nuts and human heads have breakable covers, are spherical living things, and are filled with other important living things (some of which may even resemble one another -- compare walnut meats with brain hemispheres visually, for instance)
  • Questions about meanings and usage of deez nuts
    and a reference to a popular juvenile joke, where the phrase "deez nuts," meaning "these (my) testicles" is used as a ribald non-sequitur 2) Although literally a boast of non-fidelity, the phrase originates, as indicated by Alex, as a mash-up of a popular phrase used in several hip hop songs ("these hos ain't loyal") with the joke
  • meaning - Is the usage literally nuts correct? - English Language . . .
    Nuts is commonly used as a synonym for 'crazy', however it is generally used in a colloquial sense - use of the term for people who are clinically mentally ill fell out of fashion several decades ago It does not under any circumstance mean stupid, however Thus, 'literally nuts' is a correct usage if you mean to say, 'very crazy'
  • balls have dropped what does it mean? - English Language Usage . . .
    I am not completely sure what you mean with outgrown but I do get the feeling that you are missing the point of the expression There is no link between he has balls and his balls have dropped except they reference the same part(s) of human anatomy Someone whose balls have dropped would be in a literal sense be considered in that respect a
  • vocabulary - i want to know the meaning of going nuts - English . . .
    @J R I didn't mean to reprove the OP at all I typed the words "go nuts definition" and it was the very first result in the list Typing "go nuts" would be less helpful without "definition" My search engine was set to Bing but I just tried Google and got the same thing, all results on the first page being dictionary definitions
  • euphemisms - Is (or was) the exclamation Nuts! crude? - English . . .
    ["New Yorker," Dec 23, 1950] "Please eliminate the expression 'nuts to you' from Egbert's speech " [Request from the Hays Office regarding the script of "The Bank Dick," 1940] This desire for avoidance accounts for the euphemism nerts (c 1925) By the 1940s, "nuts" was on its way out In its place, the euphemism nerts was apparently created
  • etymology - Where did the phrase chock-full come from? - English . . .
    The "chock" was the Old English name for a small scoop — one could purchase a portion of a "scoop" of, say, coffee or nuts; or a half-scoop; or a "chock"-full (as in the name of the coffee) Share Improve this answer





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