Kenneth A. Arnold (March 29, 1915 - January 16, 1984), aviator and businessman from Minnesota, is credited with coining the phrase "flying saucers" as a description of "unidentified flying objects." Specifically, during the Second World War, Arnold was a pilot. Many pilots reported sudden appearances and disappearances of mysterious shining lights alongside of or behind their planes. Arnold described the movement of nine such objects simultaneously flying past him as the way in which a hurtled saucer skips across water.
Walter Winchell, a radio commentator from the 1930s, supposedly coined the phrase, combining the two words together. The words disc comes from the records radio announcers would play, and jockey means a machine operator.
i believe it was his cornerman drew bundini brown who coined the phrase, probably back in '63 or 64.
This phrase was used by Garfield .
the book itself? or the phrase "slippery slope"? the phrase is not
The Vietnamese phrase 'Bao Thanh Nien' means youth protection. The phrase is referring to the youth festivals in Vietnam that promotes environmental protection.
No, it is a descriptive phrase coined in the 1950's to describe a UFO shape. A pilot described an object he saw flying overhead, and said it looked like two saucers placed together. The media coined the phrase "flying saucers" from this.
It was an American pilot back in 1947 before Roswell google it and It will come up - he reported them as being saucer shaped and that is when the phrase was coined as flying saucers - of course they couldnt be actual saucers as they cannot spin that high into the atmosphere
Who coined the phrase, One in a million””
A coined expression is a phrase that is very popular or one that is used often. A coined expression can also be a new phrase or an existing phrase or word that is used in a new sense.
Nam June Paik coined the phrase "Information Highway" in 1974. :)
Bill Engvall is the comedian who coined the phrase, "Here's your sign".
robert hooke coined the phrase tiny boxes and he was looking at a cell
Neologism
Frederick Douglass is often credited with coining the phrase "It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men." This statement underscores the importance of investing in and nurturing children in their formative years to prevent challenges in adulthood.
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