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  1. Apr 21, 2016 · The word rage comes through French from Latin rabies, "frenzy, rage, madness".The English word apparently went from rage "vehement passion" to the fixed phrase the rage meaning "the latest fad"; then the expression x is the rage was intensified by adding all, similar to the way you can add all to other things, like x is all messed up.

  2. 7. According to usingenglish.com "all the rage" means the following: If something's all the rage, it is very popular or fashionable at the moment. I understand this primary meaning. However, I was told that this idiom also implies popularity of something short-term that will soon decline, leaving no tangible results.

  3. Jun 8, 2014 · That is all. & The nineteenth century dislike of Romanticism is the rage of Caliban not seeing his own face in a glass. The nineteenth century dislike of realism is the rage of Caliban seeing his own face in a glass. The nineteenth century dislike of romanticism is the rage of Caliban not seeing his own face in a glass.

  4. 2. "All in a day's work" refers to any task that is done routinely. It can be negative (e.g. tasks you don't care for doing), neutral, ironic, etc. based upon speaker preferences. As for origins, the definitions made reference to nautical navigation, and I believe they were referring to Celestial Navigation. Celestial Navigation involved using ...

  5. 70. Here's two ways I've seen the "all, but" idiom used: "Close all tabs but this one" (Any modern application with a number of tabs might have this as an option.) It means "close all the tabs, but not this one". "With that goal, the championship is all but decided". This seems to mean "you can say/do whatever (all) you want, (but) it won't ...

  6. Jun 20, 2016 · That ilke fyri rage in which that thei the lawe [of marriage] excede. 1500-20 Dunbar Poems 1xxxiv.8 Quhone the biche is jolie and on rage. rage VERB (emphasis mine) †3. To behave wantonly or riotously; to take one's pleasure, to play. Const with (a person). • a 1300 Body & Soul in Map's poems 347 . Body, miht thou nought lepen to playen ant ...

  7. Apr 20, 2023 · simmer. VERB. 1 (of water or food) stay just below the boiling point while being heated. ‘the goulash was simmering slowly on the stove’. [figurative] ‘the disagreement simmered for years and eventually boiled over’. 1.2 Be in a state of suppressed anger or excitement.

  8. Jul 6, 2023 · The Latin adjective lividus means "dull, grayish, or leaden blue." From this came the French livide, which English borrowed as livid. The word can describe flesh discolored by a bruise or an appearance deficient in color. Eventually, it came to be used for the complexion of a person pale with anger (i.e., "a person livid with rage").

  9. Jul 10, 2016 · Number me with rage. Number me in haste. The dice decide my fate. The meaning seems related to dice cast. A single standard 6-face die cannot yield 8, but other less standard polyhedral dice (8-, 12-, 20-face polyhedra, used in war-games and role-playing games) can: Since they are non-standard, I will assume two 6-face dice are cast.

  10. Apr 15, 2013 at 13:47. The Lord sent him a vision - so he saw inside his head what to do. A rage: an intense feeling. So an intense vision I would say. – mplungjan. Apr 15, 2013 at 14:54. Add a comment.