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  1. Jul 5, 2022 · According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the earliest written instance of the word chicken in the craven sense comes from William Shakespeare’s Cymbeline, circa 1616. "Forthwith they fly,...

    • “We’re living in high cotton.” Cotton has long been a key crop to the South’s economy, so every harvest farmers pray for tall bushes loaded with white fluffy balls in their fields.
    • “She was madder than a wet hen.” Hens sometimes enter a phase of “broodiness” — they’ll stop at nothing to incubate their eggs and get agitated when farmers try to collect them.
    • “He could eat corn through a picket fence.” This describes someone with an unfortunate set of buck teeth. They tend to stick up and outward, like a horse’s teeth.
    • “You can’t make a silk purse out of a sow’s ear.” A pig’s ear may look soft, pink, and shiny, but you’re not fooling anyone by calling it your new Marc Jacobs bag.
  2. And the term is especially well-known in the phrase to play chicken, a contest of nerve in which two cars drive towards either each other or an obstacle, cliff edge, etc – the loser being the ...

  3. Sep 6, 2002 · September 6, 2002 at 1:00 a.m. EDT. Where did the word "goosebumps" come from? -- Devin Rosen, 5, Germantown. Oh, you mean cutis ansirina? That's the medical term for what we know as...

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  5. Oct 16, 2013 · Back acne was considered a sign of steroid use, and the two words soon morphed into bacne, said Ben Zimmer, a linguist and executive producer of Vocabulary.com who has written about words for The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal.

  6. Dec 10, 2020 · pimp. (n.) "one who provides others with the means and opportunity of gratifying their sexual lusts," c. 1600, of unknown origin, perhaps from French pimpant "alluring in dress, seductive," present participle of pimper "to dress elegantly" (16c.), from Old French pimpelorer, pipelorer "decorate, color, beautify."

  7. Jun 28, 2013 · capon" (a castrated rooster, for any non-poultry farmers out there) gets its name from a Latin word meaning the same ( caponem ), which itself is derived from a Proto-Indo-European root meaning...

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