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  1. Oct 20, 2020 · It is apparently where the term "round the bend" originates: British officers stationed on the island in the searing heat of summer were driven mad by the desire to return to civilisation, just around the bend. Today only the ruins of the buildings remain, but its surrounding corals make it a popular snorkelling site.

  2. Feb 1, 2016 · A hairpin road is a road with hairpin turns or bends.. According to Wikipedia: A hairpin bend, named for its resemblance to a hairpin/bobby pin, is a bend in a road with a very acute inner angle, making it necessary for an oncoming vehicle to turn almost 180° to continue on the road.

  3. Jan 4, 2017 · So the origin of the phrase "bend the rules" can not be sensibly attributed to a "lesbian rule" or flexible curve as it more commonly called nowadays. The reference to "bending the rule to the crooked stick" in the 1703 essay is a metaphor. The writer of this essay is saying that just because we do something out of tradition, it doesn't mean it ...

  4. Apr 5, 2018 · That weekend, though, the general public weighed in with lines around the block. By the end of 1968, the 2 1/2-hour science fiction epic ended up being the year's biggest box office hit. Critic Bob Mondello saw "2001" when it first came out and remembers what made it one of the most argued over and most influential blockbusters ever made.

  5. May 16, 2017 · Conclusions. Though authorities find instances of "beating the bushes" and "beating about/around the bush" that go back at least four centuries, neither expression seems to have been especially common in published works between roughly 1660 and 1750 (in the case of "beat the bushes") and not until the 1820s for "beat about the bush"; "beat around the bush" begins to appear some 40 years after ...

  6. Nov 11, 2018 · Walking typically happens around 8 months to a year-ish. Too young to understand language to the point of being able to identify a loophole in the rules and exploit it. – Jim

  7. Mar 27, 2011 · It originally referred to sailing around Cape Horn (at the southern tip of South America), which was a long and dangerous journey. According to The Encyclopedia of Word and Phrase Origins , In the days of the tall ships any sailor who had sailed around Cape Horn was entitled to spit to windward; otherwise, it was a serious infraction of nautical rules of conduct.

  8. Broadly speaking, peer seems to have two meanings, looking intently and being partially visible. a). She peered into the darkness. b). The moon peered from behind dark clouds. However, I have difficulty understanding ‘peer’ with ‘around something’ as follows. Would you help me? (‘Around’ often annoys me!)

  9. Jul 19, 2019 · 8. For most of my life I have used an expression "go around Hiram's barn" to mean an unnecessarily complicated way to do something or an unnecessarily circuitous route. Recently my daughter informed me that the real expression is "around Robin Hood's barn", and that "around Hiram's barn" is an expression that is unique to me alone.

  10. Sep 7, 2018 · word-forming element of verbs and nouns from verbs, with a wide range of meaning: "about, around; thoroughly, completely; to make, cause seem; to provide with; at, on, to, for;" from Old English be-"about, around, on all sides" (the unstressed form of bi "by").