Its origins have been traced back to as early as 1393. It means to make do with what one has. This phrase was adopted by the Wrestling world two or three hundred years ago (Lancashire wrestling) to distinguish free-style wrestling from Greco-Roman wrestling (which doesn't allow certain holds).
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
the best catch phrase in the world is whats poppinYou have your own catch phrase, don't ask other people what it should be.
There is no such phrase. There is a word rampage. It is of Scottish origin, perhaps from RAMP, to rear up.
Joseph Heller wrote the book called Catch-22 where he coined the phrase.
"Eric Partridge, "A Dictionary of Catch Phrases American and British," mentions some similar phrases that mean "How's your sex life?" They refer to the male organs and are "low" phrases (he says) of U.S. origin, dating from the 1920s."
If you're "playing catch-up," it means you are behind on your task and are trying to catch up to the deadline or to the other people. There is really no set origin -- that's just what "to catch up" means.
The phrase catching a cold is an idiom since you cannot physically catch an illness. This phrase has been around for hundreds of years but there is no indication as to when it originated.
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
There is no such phrase as "eat you".
Burgo's Catch Phrase was created in 1997.
Burgo's Catch Phrase ended in 2003.
She says Jeepers
the best catch phrase in the world is whats poppinYou have your own catch phrase, don't ask other people what it should be.
The duration of Burgo's Catch Phrase is 1800.0 seconds.
You catch him in the Cave of Origin in Sootoplis
There is no such phrase. There is a word rampage. It is of Scottish origin, perhaps from RAMP, to rear up.
the catch phrase is frank