answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

A spring chicken is one born in the spring. If you think about it, you can see how "spring chicken" would mean a young chicken. Chickens do not have long lives, escpecially when they are destined to be eaten for Sunday dinner. The flock of little yellow, fluffy chicks running around are spring chickens. Old people started using that as a humorous way to joke about how old they were. "I'm no spring chicken," someone will say, "but I can still get out on the dance floor."

User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: When did the idiom no spring chicken become popular?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

What does you're no spring chicken?

A spring chicken is the farmer's term for one born in the latest spring. This idiom is saying you're not very young.


Where did the idiom no spring chicken originate?

The idiom "no spring chicken" originated in the early 18th century and refers to someone who is no longer young or youthful. It alludes to chickens being considered most desirable as food when they are young and tender in the spring.


What does you're no spring chicken mean?

A spring chicken is the farmer's term for one born in the latest spring. This idiom is saying you're not very young.


Is spring out into learning the correct phrase to use?

No. There is an idiom Spring into action, meaning to get active immediately, and there is an idiom Spring out, meaning to appear suddenly. Use one or the other.


What is the idiom in spring is in the air You can feel it everywhere?

There isn't an idiom here. Spring is a season, and the song is telling how the season is flowing through the air and people can feel it.


Is 'chicken' an idiom?

Chicken is not an idiom, because an idiom is a phrase. Chicken, meaning afraid or cowardly, is a slang term. Slang is when you have a word (sometimes a couple of words) that local people use in a different way from the accepted meaning. Americans call someone 'chicken' not because they are domesticated birds that lay eggs and taste good fried, but because they act afraid.


What is the meaning of the idiom all spring gladness left his heart?

This idiom implies that someone's joy and happiness have vanished completely or abruptly. It suggests a sudden and total loss of positive feelings or emotions.


What does the idiom he's a cool guy mean?

It's not an idiom. "Cool" is a slang term meaning someone is popular or fashionable.


what does the idiom mean He's a cool guy?

It's not an idiom. "Cool" is a slang term meaning someone is popular or fashionable.


What is Idiom for become depraved of character?

I don't


What is a sentence of idiom a burning question?

"A burning question" idiomatically refers to a pressing or urgent matter that demands an answer or resolution.


What does chicken mean idiom?

chicken hearted, spring chicken, to chicken out, headless chickens, chickens come home to roost, which was first- the chicken or the egg, don't count your chickens till they've hatched, why did the chicken cross the road?