Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin both popularized it during the American revolution.
There is no such phrase. There is a word rampage. It is of Scottish origin, perhaps from RAMP, to rear up.
The Spanish for "I have put" is he puesto, could this be the origin?
It's not a phrase, and it's one word "armpit". Origin is from Old English earm "arm" and pytt "hole in the ground".
make a killing
Caesar Augustus.
The phrase "robbing both cradle and grave" is used to describe someone who takes advantage of both the young and the old for personal gain. The cradle represents youth and innocence, while the grave symbolizes old age and vulnerability. By using this phrase, people emphasize the immorality of exploiting individuals at both ends of the age spectrum for selfish reasons.
Cradle to the Grave was created on 1994-11-04.
The Production Budget for Cradle 2 the Grave was $25,000,000.
From the cradle to the grave means from birth until death; a person's entire life.
this phrase basically means that the welfare state/system is allowing people to think and so forth fully rely on the welfare benifits to support them through life from the cradle to the grave without them having to do hardley any supporting of them selfes
"Cradle to the grave" is an example of an idiom, a figurative phrase that conveys a certain meaning other than the literal interpretation of the words. It is a metaphorical expression used to describe the entirety of a person's life from birth to death.
Cradle to grave is a term many people use to describe their whole life. This translates to birth to death.
The term was used in The Tatler by Richard Steele in 1709. "A modest fellow never has a doubt from his cradle to his grave."
Life-long
yes
Cradle-to-grave is a term used in the insurance industry and when referring to certain government benefits. The term means you are covered from birth until death.
The Mississippi - 1982 Cradle to Grave 2-2 was released on: USA: 4 October 1983