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  1. How did the slang meaning of "flog" come about?

    May 7, 2011 · I've searched multiple dictionaries and Etymonline but the only origin for "flog" that I can find is: 1670s, slang, perhaps a schoolboy shortening of L. flagellare "flagellate." This clearly rela...

  2. meaning in context - What does 'beating the bishop' mean? - English ...

    Jun 7, 2025 · Eric Partridge, Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English, fifth edition (1961) has this entry: bishop, flog the. (Of men) to masturbate: low: late C. 19–20. Also bash the bishop (esp. Army). …

  3. Origin of the slang "L7" - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    Nov 5, 2020 · According to a Reddit post A square.. hence shape of L7 {} the origin is that the two adjacent characters L7 looks kind of like a square. It doesn't look very square when the riser of 7 is …

  4. Origin of "tan someone's hide" as in "I'm gonna tan your hide"

    Dec 19, 2017 · Doubling back to Brockett's 1825 glossary, and an 1830 publication by Robert Forby (Vocabulary of East Anglia, a vocabulary which the title page advertises as having been collected in …

  5. idioms - Flog meaning to sell in "Flogging a dead horse" - English ...

    Oct 19, 2013 · I saw an article recently where the author used the term "flogging a dead horse" where the term flogging was meant in the UK slang sense of "to sell".It was accompanied by a drawing of a …

  6. What is the origin of "don't punch a gift horse in the mouth"?

    Aug 27, 2021 · By far the earliest match for "punch a gift horse" in Google Books search results is from a 1972 issue of National Lampoon, a U.S. satirical magazine that grew out of The Harvard Lampoon, a …

  7. Origin of "the beatings will continue until morale improves"

    Jul 1, 2024 · What is the origin of the phrase the beatings will continue until morale improves? There is a Metafilter and a Quora out on it, but they are inconclusive, and the phrase does not appear in the

  8. idioms - What is an alternative (more positive) analogy to "beating a ...

    Jul 17, 2012 · I'm looking for an analogy for my repeated attempts to revive interest in a project. The phrase beating a dead horse almost fits the bill, but a dead horse refers to a subject that is no longer …

  9. orthography - Waling vs wailing vs whaling upon - English Language ...

    May 22, 2017 · Now U.S. colloq. trans. To beat, flog, thrash. 1790 F. Grose Provinc. Gloss. (ed. 2) Whale, to beat with a horsewhip or pliant stick. transf. intr. To do something implied by the context …

  10. phrase requests - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    May 5, 2016 · I'm looking for an idiom or expression that would mean "all one's efforts wasted". I have found "to have one's cake dough". Can I use it for "all my efforts wasted" too? ( A non-native friend …