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  1. Dictionary
    bad blood

    noun

    • 1. ill feeling: "there has always been bad blood between these families"
  2. Nov 26, 2017 · The American Heritage Dictionary of Idioms dates the expression bad blood to the early 19th century: This term is based on the old association with blood and emotion, particularly anger. Versions such as ill blood preceded it; Charles Lamb was among the first to use the idiom in its current form in an 1823 essay.

  3. 1 Answer. Sorted by: 4. As far as I know, it comes from “blood feuds” between families, clans, or tribes. Have a look at Wiktionary’s definition. One of the earliest appearances seems to be in Essays of Elia by Charles Lamb in 1823. Share. Improve this answer. edited Aug 2, 2012 at 13:08.

  4. In ancient Middle Eastern culture, blood rituals symbolized bonds that were far greater than those of the family. Hence the bond between ‘Blood Brothers’—warriors who symbolically share the blood they have shed together in battle—is far stronger than the one between you and the boy you grew up with who kept pinching your records.

  5. Nov 12, 2011 · As well as an intensifying adjective it is also used as an exclamation. This is from where the 'Bloody Hell' of the OP originates. The expression, so the legend goes, was once 'By our Lady Mary', shortened to 'Bloody Mary' and given as an exclamation following some shocking news. e.g. 'Ten of ours are dead', 'Bloody Mary'.

  6. Jul 22, 2022 · The phrase ‘bloody drunk’ was apparently = ‘as drunk as a blood’ (cf. ‘as drunk as a lord’); thence it was extended to kindred expressions, and at length to others; probably, in later times, its associations with bloodshed and murder (cf. a bloody battle, a bloody butcher) have recommended it to the rough classes as a word that appeals to their imagination.

  7. Jun 3, 2019 · The verb in the meaning of to urinate, dates back to about 1300 but the newer meaning of to leave or go away seem to have originated in the 1930s: to piss off 1. intransitive. To leave, go away. Frequently in imperative.The imperative is sometimes used simply to express disbelief, rather than dismissal (cf. to get away at get v. Phrasal verbs 1).

  8. Feb 24, 2017 · Wiktionary gives the meaning of "break bad" but does not mention about the origin: 1. (colloquial, of an event or of one's fortunes) To go wrong; to go downhill. 2. (colloquial, chiefly Southern US and Midwest US, of a person) To go bad; to turn toward immorality or crime. Cassell's Dictionary of Slang (by Jonathon Green) has the below ...

  9. Dec 2, 2010 · pick of a bad lot. They are the pick of a bad lot. This is a sentence from a 1892 novel. What does that mean? It means "they" are the best (of their kind) that could be found, but that doesn't mean they are very good. It is like saying "this wine is the best of a poor vintage" or that someone is "the smartest one in the remedial program ...

  10. Apr 16, 2016 · 2. It means that working overtime for us is just normal, like the blood in our veins. These writers try to avoid cliches, and here the writer has done so beautifully. And it is not dismissive. It's just saying this is normal. I have seen The Wire but I do not remember the scene.

  11. May 14, 2021 · 3. If my friend and I ruined your birthday party by showing up late, I could aptly speak for the both of us and say, "Our bad." That wouldn't be weird sounding. That would be totally understood. People pluralize "my bad" as "our bad" all the time. Here's an example of it being used by Apple for the name of an Apple podcast: