A Complete Word Dictionary Encyclopedia
A Complete Word Dictionary Encyclopedia

Google
 
Web www.click4everything.com

Results per page:

acerbity.html -


 Could not find an exact match for acerbity.html. Closest matches are listed below.
Traditional English :: acerbic
acerbity.html - adj.
1 astringently sour; harsh-tasting.
2 bitter in speech, manner, or temper.
    acerbically adv. acerbity n. (pl. -ies). [L acerbus sour-tasting]
Traditional English :: acerbic
acerbity.html - adj.
1 astringently sour; harsh-tasting.
2 bitter in speech, manner, or temper.
    acerbically adv. acerbity n. (pl. -ies). [L acerbus sour-tasting]
Traditional English :: acerbic
acerbity.html - adj.
1 astringently sour; harsh-tasting.
2 bitter in speech, manner, or temper.
    acerbically adv. acerbity n. (pl. -ies). [L acerbus sour-tasting]
English Idioms :: ace
acerbity.html - See: WITHIN AN ACE OF.
English Idioms :: ace in the hole
acerbity.html - {n. phr.} 1. An ace given to a player face down so that other players in a card game cannot see it . * /When the cowboy bet all his money in the poker game he did not know that the gambler had an ace in the hole and would win it from him./ 2. {informal} Someone or something important that is kept as a surprise until the right time so as to bring victory or success. * /The football team has a new play that they are keeping as an ace in the hole for the big game./ * /The lawyer's ace in the hole was a secret witness who saw the accident./ Compare: CARD UP ONE'S SLEEVE.
New English :: ace adjective (Youth Culture)
acerbity.html - In young people's slang: great, fantastic, terrific. Etymology: The adjectival use has arisen from the noun ace, which essentially means 'number one'. History and Usage: As any reader of war comics will know , during the First World War outstanding pilots who had succeeded in bringing down ten or more enemy planes were known as aces; shortly after this, ace started to be used in American English to mean any outstanding person or thing, and by the middle of the century was often used with another noun following (as in 'an ace sportsman'). It was a short step from this attributive use to full adjectival status. In the eighties, ace was re-adopted by young people as a general term of approval, and this time round it was always used as an adjective ('that's really ace!') or adverbially ('ace!') as a kind of exclamation. With staff, everything becomes possible. And--ace and brill--they confer instant status on the employer at the same time. A double benefit: dead good and the apotheosis of yuppiedom. Daily Telegraph 12 July 1987, p.
21 The holiday was absolutely ace--loads of sailing and mountain walking, and even a night's camping in the hills. Balance (British Diabetic Association) Aug.-Sept. 1989, p. 45
acerbity.html -