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tushy查看 tushy 在百度字典中的解释百度英翻中〔查看〕
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  • etymology - How widely used is the word tush - English Language . . .
    In my dialect of American English, the word "tush" or "tushy" is a dimminuitive of "rear end" (e g , something you'd say about a baby, not as harsh as "butt" and a word you aren't ashamed to say to
  • Where did the phrase I dont give a rats ass come from?
    The OED gives the first citation of the phrase from Leon Uris, "Battle Cry" in 1953 (but if it appeared in print then, it would certainly have been around for a while before that They also give a possibly related phrase "don't give a dead rat" from Mark Twain, "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" (1884) COHA (Corpus of Historical American English) has its first instance in 1967 If you're
  • etymology - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    "Tail over teakettle" is one of several similar phrases to describe a tumble or fall But where how did this originate? A few web searches give me pages where people use the phrase, and one of the
  • When and where did spanking begin to be used as an adjective?
    The connection between the baby and the spank on the tushy is pretty well engrained in the American psyche, I believe By the way, another Americanism is "as cute as a baby's bottom," (or sometimes "smooth as a baby's bottom") which adds another wrinkle to the notion of brand spanking newness
  • etymology - Origin of the idiom butt of jokes - English Language . . .
    Similar phrases: He is getting the brunt of the joke He is getting the raw end of the deal He got the business end of a sword Someone who continually gets the joke butts can be referred to as a butt monkey but that may be returning to using "butt" to mean your tushy
  • Was the informal usage of kosher an AmE one originally?
    They, and their children (or at least many of them) spoke a low-brow version of American English whose contribution to American culture includes such words as tushy, heiny, chutzpah, mitzvah, schlep, "enjoy!", etc, and, yes, kosher, too





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