Go To Hell In A Handbasket Meaning And Origin


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On Language


On Language

Author: William Safire

language: en

Publisher: Avon Books

Release Date: 1981


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Includes chapters on slang, jargon, and neologisms.

Cambridge Dictionary of American Idioms


Cambridge Dictionary of American Idioms

Author: Paul Heacock

language: en

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Release Date: 2003-09-22


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This book unlocks the meaning of more than 5,000 idioms used in American English today.

Going to Hell in a Hen Basket


Going to Hell in a Hen Basket

Author: Robert Alden Rubin

language: en

Publisher: Macmillan + ORM

Release Date: 2015-08-04


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“A pain staking but hilarious journey amidst the strings and arrows of language misfortune . . . The result is the perfect gift book for word nerds.” —Brevity Malapropism—A word or phrase that has been mistaken for another, usually because of its sound rather than its meaning. Everyone has made the mistake of using a word or phrase that they think sounds correct, but in fact is not. Malapropisms make some sense. They have a semantic logic to them, even if that logic makes perfect nonsense. In Going to Hell in a Hen Basket, author Robert Alden Rubin delights in the creative misuse of words and celebrates the verbal and textual flubs that ignore the conventions of proper English. Culled from blogs, the deepest corners of the internet, as well as some of the most esteemed publications, here is a collection of classic malapropisms paired with hilarious illustrations. Examples include: adieu, without further—Conflation of bidding adieu (saying goodbye) with ado (complicated doings, ceremony) to mean “without saying anything more.” feeble position—An unborn child in a fetal position seems weak and helpless, which explains the confusion here. The two words also share some sexist cultural and literary associations. Feeble (weak) originates from a Latin word for something to be wept over; fetal (relating to a fetus) originates from the same preliterate Indo-European word that gives us female. Perfect for bookworms and wordsmiths, the point here isn’t to shame the malapropagandists, but to delight in the twists and turns writers put our language through and to amuse and inform those of us who care about words.