Quantcast
Join two wayward radio hosts on A Way With Words, the call-in radio show about writing, speaking, slang, old sayings, and more.
Citations in the Category English
English language, including all dialects and variations. You can also see entries assigned to this category.

(2/1517 pages)  <  1 2 3 4 >  Last »

100-mile-an-hour tape n. HIPKE: Yeah, we had 100-mile-an-hour tape and a little foam. And it’s just really—it’s rock solid on there. FLOCK: What’s 100-mile-an-hour tape? HIPKE: It’s supposed to last up to 100 miles an hour I guess before it starts peeling off the plane. [ ] [full cite] (Jan. 30, 2007)
11 p.m. player n. That is what happens when you chase 11 p.m. players, also known as past-prime-time players, something the Mets do often. [ ] [full cite] (Nov. 30, 2004)
12-9 n. Based on the dozens of cases of people struck by subway trains each year—events known in transit parlance by the code 12-9—it is easy to speculate on what their last week must have been like. [ ] [full cite] (Dec. 4, 2005)
128-er n. Tori, a West London-raised computer software engineer, dubs herself a “128-er,” because she spends 128 hours per week dressed as a woman and looks like a guy only at her nine-to-five. [ ] [full cite] (Oct. 17, 2005)
12th of never n. The Biplane supposedly has a V-4, but the show bike is most likely a make-believe mockup. Looks to be straight out of a video game. When will either Suzuki be produced? Right after the 12th of Never. [ ] [full cite] (Oct. 30, 2007)
14-er n. As a man in his 70s, Dr. Reed started climbing the “14-ers,” as they are called: the dozens of mountains in Colorado that rise to 14,000 feet or higher. Friends said that on those steep mountains, where the air grows thin, he outclimbed friends two to three decades younger. [ ] [full cite] (Apr. 14, 2007)
1661 n. The technical term for this—where you look pullable from behind, with your slashed mini, straggly Joss Stone hair and macrame ankle bracelet, but when swivelled around, look more like someone eligible to collect a pension—is 1661. (Get it? Sixteen from the back, 61 from the front.) Oh, dear. Perhaps that’s what I am: the ultimate 1661. Yet isn’t a certain amount of self-delusion necessary in order to cope with the horrible, galloping inevitability of old age? [ ] [full cite] (Jul. 20, 2007)
1661 n. I’ve always detested the expression “mutton dressed as lamb.” It’s misogynist, mean and women are not meat; even Sam Kekovich would concur with that. But there’s a new version of it that describes women who retain hairstyles or wardrobes suited to a different life stage—women such as Melanie Griffith and Faye Dunaway. The term is “1661”—a woman who looks 16 from behind, 61 from the front. [ ] [full cite] (Jul. 20, 2007)
1661 n. Great i am now a 1661 and that is only a compliment from behind. [ ] [full cite] (Jul. 20, 2007)
1661 n. I’m a 1661 woman—sixteen from behind, sixty one from the front. [ ] [full cite] (Jul. 20, 2007)

(2/1517 pages)  <  1 2 3 4 >  Last »

Recent Catchwords
antihomonuptial adj. (11/30)
cellblock n. (11/30)
cut and shut n. (11/30)
photoporation n. (11/30)
dry powder n. (11/30)
phytocapping n. (11/30)
toe pick n. (11/30)
smokepole n. (11/30)
heavy furniture n. (11/29)
gulch n. (11/24)
hyper-edit n. (11/24)
doga n. (11/24)
hot body n. (11/24)
wovit n. (11/24)
boyat n. (11/23)
KLM n. (11/23)
governist n. (11/23)
wirehouse n. (11/23)
mockolate n. (11/23)
detailer n. (11/23)
 More catchwords...
New Comments
jordan commented on tom-walkers (11/30)
Spc. POG commented on fobbit (11/30)
dallas waxler commented on whimperative (11/29)
C. Sean Holliday commented on may state (11/27)
Suzanne commented on Yankee dime (11/24)
Bink commented on catch a crab (11/21)
Bink commented on hotbox (11/21)
Steve commented on hotbox (11/18)
Dr. Andrew Ruddle commented on midnight drop (11/18)
Kortney commented on shralping (11/16)
Michelle Jerome commented on woo-woo (11/14)
stack commented on robotripping (11/13)
R. Hopkins commented on one-eighty-seven (11/12)
C commented on featherwood (11/11)
mitch commented on catch a crab (11/4)
Subscribe to the RSS feed.Subscribe to the mailing list.Browse the archive.Add to Technorati Favorites. © 1999-2008 by Grant Barrett, Double-Tongued Dictionary, New York City.