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Dictionary of Phrase and Fableexplanations, origins, and definitions
This is a paperback cut-down version of the complete Oxford Dictionary of Phrase & Fable. It contains over 10,000 phrases, sayings, and allusions - including single words and names that crop up in cultural references - and offers a brief explanation of their meanings and origins.
There are also up-to-date entries on historic events such as 9/11 and tsunami, and I was glad to see that dodgy dossier was included - so that it will hang as long as possible like an albatross around Tony Blair's neck where it belongs. Commonly used words which occur in a number of expressions are given their own sub-categories - as follows: milk It includes fictional characters such as Anna Karenina, historic events such as the name of the B-29 bomber that dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima (Enola Gay), obscure terms such as oxymoron and palimpsest, and important figures such as Hindenburg and Rasputin, as well as the possible origins of expressions such as backing into the limelight, and even the fashionable jumping the shark. This is a serious modern contender challenging the longstanding supremacy of Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable - a book of which it is said nobody would find of any use, but which has been in print for over 150 years, because it is so eccentric and funny. © Roy Johnson 2006 [more REFERENCE books] Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, Oxford: Oxford University Press (2nd edn) 2006, pp.805, ISBN 019920246X |
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