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  • single word requests - What do you call the sound of a bell? - English . . .
    The sound of a hand held brass bell, to me, is "ding-a-ling " "Tinkle" would apply at best to a very small bell (and at worst is slang for urinate as I commented above), and "brrring" would apply to the repeated hammering on a bell such as one used to hear telephones or school bells make "Bling" is slang for gaudy jewellery!
  • idioms - For whom the bell tolls - origin of ask not instead of . . .
    Somebody said in that, I think, "Ask not for whom the bell tolls, for the bell tolls for thee " And that is why when there is a strike of the Dobb's House workers, when there is a picket for the painters, when there is a picket on for any union, that is your union on fight, that is your union that is trying to live, that is the organization you ought to support
  • etymology - What caused bell peppers to be called capsicums in some . . .
    I have read this answer on the question "Why is the word “pepper” used for both capsicum (e g bell pepper) and piper (e g black pepper)?", and it contains some useful etymological information I've noticed that what name we call Capsicum annuum by seems to depend on which country we are speaking English in
  • Where does it comes from pull the other leg, its got bells on?
    @Astralbee I was born in Derbyshire in 1949 and I can remember "pull the other one it's got bells on" from the late '50s
  • What does hells bells refer to? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    It's only a coincidence that 'hell' (cognate to German 'Hölle') and 'bell' (MLG belle) rhyme in English By inspecting their etymologies you can see that they came from very different sounding roots and only by the Great Vowel Shift did they converge
  • How to cite an author who does not capltalize her name if you are . . .
    According to the very link you have on CMoS, it says that one must capitalise and advises to re-write Though oddly, while it (correctly) says "E E Cummings" is fine because he didn't lowercase his name himself, and advise rewriting to not begin a sentence with "bell hooks", there's an exception made for "names like eBay"
  • Etymology of dong and dongle - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    imitative of the sound of a bell, c 1560 and similarly for ding: ding (v ) 1819, "to sound as metal when struck," possibly abstracted from ding-dong, of imitative origin The meaning "to deal heavy blows" is c 1300, probably from Old Norse dengja "to hammer," perhaps also imitative Meaning "dent" is 1960s Related: Dinged; dinging
  • Obscene yourself (literally) in Hemingways For Whom The Bell Tolls
    I am reading Hemingway's "For Whom The Bell Tolls" (an edition from 1960) Throughout the book, strong words and obscenities are replaced literally by the term "obscenity" or similar For example (emphasis added): “My transmission is smashed,” the driver, who was bent over by the rear of his truck, said “Obscene your transmission
  • etymology - Why do we beat seven bells out of someone? - English . . .
    [Apparently originally with allusion to the nautical tradition of sounding ‘eight bells’ to mark a sailor's death (i e sounding the ship's bell eight times, the usual signal for the end of a watch; hence ‘seven bells’ would carry the implication ‘almost to death’ ] a
  • A figure of speech to illustrate the irreversibility of an action
    Personally I like "You can't unring that bell" as deadrat mentioned above The phrase refers to the fact that you can't un-hear a bell that has been rung There's a nice essay about its history here: Unring the Bell (impossibility of taking back a statement or action)





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