The Oxford English Dictionary doesn't have much information on this phrase- just that it's a combination of hot (adjective) + headed (adjective), and that it dates back to at least 1603. The similar phrase hothead dates back a little farther, 1584.
The origin of the expression is obscure. It means "ruined everything".
It came from the movie Poltergiest.
no prefix and the suffix is -ed
Origin: The verb 'to come' has always meant to arrive or appear. In this 20th Century African-American expression, 'come' takes on the meaning of 'speak.'
It means whatever happens, you're going to do whatever you said right before you said this phrase. For example, "I am going to pass this test come rain or come shine."
fire eaters
hotheaded
radicals
hotheaded naked ice borers
Booth was a hotheaded alcoholic.
I would say Taurus, the bull, they get really hotheaded by the simplest things... I would say Taurus, the bull, they get really hotheaded by the simplest things... I would say Taurus, the bull, they get really hotheaded by the simplest things...
firey hotheaded impulsive picks fights
fire-eaters :)
To get the "Come Back to my Place" expression you need to buy the expression book from the Bowerstone Market bookstore "Fiction Burns."
ghosts
From the movie "clueless"
To use the "Come Back to my Place" expression, you must target the person of your choosing and open your expression menu. Then go to the "Flirt" section and choose "Come Back to my Place" expression.