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  • Where did the expression playing the worlds smallest violin come from?
    Here's a 1964 reference to the world's smallest violin in Travel magazine: RIPLEY GOES TO CANADA New Ripley's Believe It Or Not Museum in Niagara Falls, Ont , is located on Clifton Hill, boasts possession of such unusual oddities as world's smallest violin — presumably for playing saddest song
  • single word requests - Generic form of first world problems - English . . .
    World's Smallest Violin (also called "How Sad" or "World's Smallest Violin Playing Hearts and Flowers") is made by rubbing the thumb and forefinger together, to imitate bowing a violin This gesture is used to express sarcasm and lack of sympathy, in response to someone exaggerating a sad story or unfair treatment
  • meaning - Idioms similar to crocodile tears - English Language . . .
    You: "It's the world's smallest violin playing just for you " Explanation Violin music is often the musical score accompanying sad scenes in movies when the audience is supposed to feel sadness or sorrow for the characters Example Here is an example in full context from the film Resevoir Dogs by Quintin Tarantino
  • A word for fake sympathy? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    A common two-word phrase for this concept is "mock sympathy", which often goes along with the phrase or hand gesture of "playing the world's smallest violin " For single words, the only terms I can think of are ones that refer to sarcasm in general, rather than false expressions of sympathy in particular: scorn, sarcasm, mocking
  • Newest catch-phrases Questions - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Stack Exchange Network Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers
  • etymology - What is the meaning and origin of the common phrase the . . .
    Pistol: Why then the world's mine oyster, Which I with sword will open Falstaff: Not a penny The original implication of the phrase is that Pistol is going to use violent means (sword) to steal his fortune (the pearl one finds in an oyster) We inherit the phrase, absent its original violent connotation, to mean that the world is ours to enjoy
  • phrase requests - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Stack Exchange Network Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers
  • What is the device called when you use the same word but with two . . .
    What is the name of the device used when an author uses the same word to different effects in a sentence Here, the word 'good' is used as both a noun and adjective e g 'and good goods swimming i
  • single word requests - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Thank you for that word, but as your link already told you it has meant an idiot since the 20th century to most of the world's English-speakers The free version of the entry doesn't note this but the real OED even the hunting sense is frequently ironic Nimrod wasn't a good figure in the Old Testament, so even the people who catch the hunting
  • synonyms - What is a word for first of its kind or unlike anything . . .
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