This is an American exclamation of surprise. It doesn't mean anything except "Oh dear." The earliest use of the phrase seems to be in the 1890s. Nobody seems to know who Betsy was, either. Nowadays, it would be considered very old-fashioned, and nobody really uses it - you would probably only see it in an old book or play, or in a book or play about the 1800s.
awsome
1. toward the heavens 2. much of the heavens 3. next to the heavens
It is an exclamation - it really doesn't mean anything other than "wow."
The arch of the sky ... the heavens ... also, a field of interest.
Tuana - The first rain drop in heavens garden
Al jannah means some where in the heavens or paradise.
Heavens to Betsy ended in 1994.
Heavens to Betsy was created in 1991.
Well...her name was Betsy...and she sewed a flag with stars on it. Stars come from the heavens.
The cast of Heavens to Betsy - 1994 includes: John Caponera Boyd Gaines as Rev. Rockwood David Goldyn as Ramon Renee Lawless Dolly Parton as Betsy Baxter Constance Shulman as Lilly Walker
HTB can mean either one of the following: Heavens to Betsy; Heterotopic Bone; Hexagonal Tungsten Bronze; Hierarchical Token Bucket or High-Tension Battery.
Various theories have been put forward but it is unlikely that she will ever be properly identified . Some have tried to trace it to the Revolutionary War and to Betsy Ross but have failed ; others think it may have something to do with the frontiersman's rifle which was often referred to as Old Betsy .
The name Betsy means: God is My Concentration.
1. toward the heavens 2. much of the heavens 3. next to the heavens
The phrase "heavens above" is an expression of astonishment, surprise, or exasperation. It is often used when someone is frustrated or shocked by a situation and is looking for an explanation or solution from a higher power or higher authority.
it means 'from the heavens to the earth!;
Heavens beauty
mean people