Citations:
1991 Neil Robinson Guardian (U.K.) (Oct. 21) “Griffin Park statisticians sad to find that you cannot keep a Goodman down”: Then a scuffle broke out between Brentford’s Bates and Albion’s Bradley. “Handbags at 10 paces,” said Bobby Gould, Albion’s manager, with a glint in his eye. 1996 Times (London, U.K.) (Mar. 23) “The Times Match-By-Match Guide To The Premiership This Weekend—Football—Preview.”: Undignified scenes at Highbury the last time these teams met, in the Coca-Cola Cup quarter-finals in January, with Bruce Rioch and Terry McDermott indulging in handbags at ten paces after Ginola had been sent off. 2003 Paul "Deacon" Mirengoff Power Line (Bethesda, Md.) (Oct. 27) “Handbags”: One of the joys of following English soccer is learning some of its delightful jargon. My favorite bit, perhaps because it is so politically incorrect, is the phrase applied to second-rate soccer fights—“handbags at ten paces,” or “handbags” for short. 2004 Iain Aitch Guardian (U.K.) (June 24) “‘Are we dead yet?’”: We point, shout and indulge ourselves in what football commentators usually dub “handbags at 10 paces.” 2005 The Special Constable’s Blog (U.K.) (Feb. 17) “Bad Boys, Bad Boys, Whatcha gonna do?”: Miss H. continued to be verbally abusive and to prevent any flared tempers from spilling over in the restaurant I asked her to step outside to discuss the matter further. On my part this was a risky maneuver, as If it were to deteriorate into “handbags at dawn,” I would be unprepared.
A growing lexicon of fringe English, focusing on slang, jargon, new words, and more...
New Comments
Lance Hidy commented on
flymph (3/23)
sunnyboy0 commented on
seagen (2/12)
Trafficman2 commented on
parclo (2/12)
paul Teague commented on
Taig (2/5)
paul Teague commented on
Taig (2/5)
vickie commented on
moded (1/5)
midsummer commented on
gleek (1/3)
to run away is to Die In Tragedy commented on
robotripping (12/4)
1270 dictionary entries
17391 citations
48 visitors right now
101127988 total site hits
Word-a-day mailing list
RSS:
© 1999-2006 by Grant Barrett, Double-Tongued Word Wrester, New York City.