"A good time was had by all" was the title of a book of poems by a Miss Stevie Smith in 1937.
According to "A dictionary of catch phrases" (see related link) Miss Smith's book popularized the phrase, but Smith herself had taken it from parish magazines, where reports of church picnics would end with that phrase.
It originated in Nigeria and went viral soon after in Liberia amongst Christians facing terrible persecution, torture, murder and other harassment from the community around them. You can read more here: http://stpaulgreensboro.org/pastor/documents/04_29_12Sermon.pdf
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the common word catch acquired the slang meaning of hidden cost or qualification in 1885 so whats the catch probably dates from about that time also or soon afterward as it is scarcely an idiomatic turn of phrase at all but rather straightforward talk
Meaning everyone's help is needed to complete a lot of work in a short period of time. It is a nautical term that requires all seamen of all watches to appear on deck, originating in the early days of sailing ships
All and all is a phrase it is not a part of speech. Words are parts of speech.I think the phrase should be all in all not all and all.All in all is used to introduce a summary or a general statement - All in all it was a good day.
The origin of the phrase 'All for one, and one for all' is that it comes from The Three Musketeers. The novel was written by Alexandre Dumas in the year 1844.
The phrase "all the time" has three syllables. The syllables in the phrase are all-the-time.
Maxwell House coined the phrase good to the last drop. This is considered one of the top 100 marketing campaigns of all time.
We had a good time at the party, all in all. (The phrase is more or less equivalent to, all things considered.)
If someone wants you to have a good time, have a wonderful time, or have a fantastic time, they just want you to enjoy yourself. Those are all descriptions of what they hope your time will be like as you spend it.
'Bare all' is literal, colloquial and contemporaneous. There is neither imagery nor symbolism.
It originated in Nigeria and went viral soon after in Liberia amongst Christians facing terrible persecution, torture, murder and other harassment from the community around them. You can read more here: http://stpaulgreensboro.org/pastor/documents/04_29_12Sermon.pdf
Also, for good and all. Permanently, forever. .
The origin of the phrase comes from the Bible. However, it's not "money is the root cause of all evil." The phrase is "The LOVE of money is the root of all evil." Basically, this means that greed causes us to do evil.
Don't know the origin, but I am originally from Wigan in the North West and we use the phrase "Coppering Up" when using all our change to pay for something.
Something which fits you to a t is a very good fit.The phrase is not recent: it occurs in Eddy Cochran's lyric Jelly Bean in the 1950's.There are several theories about its origin:- they are all preposterous.
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