4605072
9780071460835
Eureka! This book will send wordsmiths and language lovers alike to seventh heaven He's a Good Samaritan. It's time to pay the piper. Don't count your chickens before they are hatched. We use phrases like these all the time, but did you ever wonder why? Why isn't he a Good Norwegian? Is it ever time to pay the drummer? And why do we avoid counting chickens instead of, say, ducklings? The answers are here in this colorful compilation of the true stories behind everyday words and phrases. Drawing from the Bible, Greek and Roman mythology, the works of Shakespeare, and other sources, this insightful collection explains the fascinating origins of more than 175 common expressions, including: Seventh Heaven: The highest level of heaven in the Islamic Koran; a place of total happiness Wear Your Heart on Your Sleeve: From the time of chivalry, when a knight carried a token of fidelity from his ladylove on his sleeve My Name Is Mudd: From Dr. Mudd, who haplessly mended the broken leg of President Lincoln's assassin Snafu: The World War II soldier's shorthand for "situation normal, all fouled up" Green-Eyed Monster: The jealous beast that Shakespeare's Iago warned Othello to look out forMann, Leonard is the author of 'Green-Eyed Monsters And Good Samaritans Literary Allusions in Everyday Language', published 2006 under ISBN 9780071460835 and ISBN 0071460837.
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