Oh, dude, that phrase "Come on Down to Florida" was actually popularized by the Florida tourism board in their marketing campaigns. So, like, technically, they're the ones who made it a thing. But, like, who knows who actually came up with it originally? Probably some Floridian trying to lure people in with promises of sunshine and gators.
This phrase was coined by Howard Lawrence Carr who hosts a popular radio program on WRKO 680 AM in Boston, Massachusetts. He often uses the phrase whenreferring to the recent death of some celebrity or potentate.
It is the time between two specified events.
The first printed use of this word was in 1889, but there are records of it being used before then, possibly since the early 1600's. It is thought that it could refer to an old phrase, "I'll quote him to a tittle.", where tittle means a miniscule amount. That means that the phrase, "down to a T" means that a person has it down to almost a precise point.
'Floating' is the gerund. Therefore the gerund phrase is 'Floating down the river on a raft'.
the phrase is 'to a T'. eg "I will quote this to a T." So I guess it is 'down to a T'.
No one knows exactly who coined the phrase "come on down to Florida" but it is believed to come from an advertisement for a clothing store in 1901. It was used by Bob Barker in the television program The Price is Right and is popular with retired persons.
the phrase of "an iron curtain has come down" was first coined by sir Winston Churchill
This phrase was coined by Howard Lawrence Carr who hosts a popular radio program on WRKO 680 AM in Boston, Massachusetts. He often uses the phrase whenreferring to the recent death of some celebrity or potentate.
The phrase "I didn't come down in the last shower" means that the person is experienced and not naive. It suggests that they are not easily fooled or unaware of what is going on around them.
I usually think "tights come down and might come up".
The idiom 'Keep your shirt on is used to tell someone to calm down. The phrase was coined in the 19th century, when men wore shirts that were highly starched and to engage in a fight they had to remove their shirts. Therefore, when you told someone to keep their shirt on, you were in fact saying lets not fight.
The phrase "pork chops and applesauce" was popularized by the character Archie Bunker, played by Carroll O'Connor, on the television show "All in the Family." The phrase became a catchphrase in the early 1970s, symbolizing Bunker's simple, down-to-earth attitude. Although O'Connor is often credited with popularizing it, the exact origin of the phrase before the show is not well-documented.
The phrase is actually "what goes up, must come down" and it is not found in the Torah. This line was said by Sir Isaac Newton in reference to gravity.
John 15:13
It is the time between two specified events.
A Muskogean speaking tribe that lived in the region was responsible for giving Pensacola Florida its name. This name can be broken down to mean hair of the head of people.
The phrase "when she got down" is an adverbial clause. Specifically, it functions as an adverbial clause of time, providing information about when the action in the main clause (she got down) occurred.