----
Join us in a chat with Ben Yagoda, author "When You Catch an Adjective, Kill It"
Today (Mon, Feb 25, 6pm Pacific, [GMT -8]) at http://wordsmith.org/chat
----

Last year we featured a week of terms in the pattern "x's y", for example
"busman's holiday" (a vacation spent doing things as at work) or "widow's
peak" (a v-shaped hairline at the top of the forehead). Terms that answer
the question "Whose what?" generate a huge response from readers. Perhaps
that's because each of those phrases has a story behind it.

Last month we featured a week of such terms coined after animals, such
as a dog's letter (the letter R) and a mare's nest (a confused mass;
a hoax). This week we'll discuss terms named after specific persons.


Buckley's chance (BUK-leez chans) noun

   No chance at all (or only a very slim chance).
   Also called "Buckley's and none" or "Buckley's hope".

[The origin of the term isn't certain but the most popular story pins it
to William Buckley (1780-1856), a British convict transported to Australia.
There, he escaped and found refuge among the Aborigines for more than three
decades. When he was rediscovered he had forgotten how to speak English.
Since survival in the outback was difficult it was said that anyone lost
there had Buckley's chance of making it.

Another possibility is a pun on the Melbourne department store Buckley
and Nunn, i.e. one has two chances: Buckley's or none.]

-Anu Garg (words at wordsmith.org)

  "First of all, understand that Kookaburra III has Buckley's chance of
   beating Stars & Stripes."
   Barry Lorge; It's the Same Language, Almost; The San Diego Union-Tribune;
   Feb 2, 1987.

This newsletter is made possible in part by these sponsors:

Don't let Scrabble cramp your style. Long words are fun to play in WildWords.
More words. More game. More fun. And no memorizing lists. http://wildwords.us

Transform your teaching career with a master's from NCATE-accredited, The
University of Scranton. 100% Online. 24/7 Access. http://www.uscranton.com/WS

See a map of your word in the Visual Thesaurus. Wordsmith readers
save 10%. Try it free! http://www.visualthesaurus.com/?ad=aw&code=h7q

............................................................................
Who breaks the thread, the one who pulls, the one who holds on? -James
Richardson, poet, professor (b. 1950)

Discuss this week's words on our bulletin board: http://wordsmith.org/board

Remove, change address, gift subs: http://wordsmith.org/awad/subscriber.html

Pronunciation:
http://wordsmith.org/words/buckleys_chance.wav
http://wordsmith.org/words/buckleys_chance.ram

Permalink: http://wordsmith.org/words/buckleys_chance.html

This message was sent to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]".

Reply via email to