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  1. Sep 27, 2019 · The expression “shotgun wedding/marriage”, as described in the following link, is an American English one. Of American-English origin, the phrases shotgun wedding and shotgun marriage denote a wedding into which one or both partners are forced, usually because the woman is pregnant.

  2. Sep 27, 2019 · The meaning of forced (instead of just quick) is almost never clearly conveyed in contexts I'm aware of. There could easily be some overlap (you have to get married quickly because you've been forced into it), but I would still point to the quick meaning if forced to choose between the two. –

  3. Aug 12, 2022 · I upvoted this answer because it is accurate and useful. To make it even better, you might include in the text of your answer the title and publication date of the book of etiquette that you link to and quote in the second part of your post; doing so is a simple and potentially valuable way to preserve the identity of the source in case something happens to the hyperlink to make it nonfunctional.

  4. a round usually wooden container with curved sides and flat ends. the amount of something in a barrel. the part of a gun that the bullets go through when the gun is fired. One thing very interesting to me is when you use "hit someone with both barrels", it is not very difficult to understand what it means and that the third definition is used ...

  5. As far as forced marriages go in stereotypical American society, a shotgun wedding is a close as it gets outside of extreme emotional or social coercion. When a shotgun wedding occurs, the bad reputation is still placed on the couple. Even the proverbial shotgun wielders are assumed justification for their actions.

  6. Jan 6, 2016 · Its prior meaning dates back to the late 1300s, and meant: "an account brought by one person to another, rumor," from Old French report "pronouncement, judgment" (Modern French rapport), from reporter "to tell, relate" (see report (v.)). It seems the report of a firearm came into being because if one only heard the sound of the firearm being ...

  7. Aug 13, 2019 · Condemnation? 'What’s the BrE for “shotgun wedding”?' 'Ans: '“shotgun wedding”' is obviously of far greater value than your answer here (18:2). Doesn't it say somewhere 'Woe unto you when all men speak well of you'? Probably banned as non-PC now. // FWIW, I've snaffled your article and left the wedding party to their own devices.

  8. Dec 14, 2018 · "千金买马骨” literally means buying horse bones with much gold. This Chinese idiom comes from "Stratagems of the Warring States- Yan Dynasty" 《战国策·燕策一·燕昭王收破燕后即位》. It is said that an ancient courtier ...

  9. Jan 6, 2022 · @KRyan I think TaliesinMerlin makes a strong case that by the mid-19th century, the verb pick, meaning harvesting, had definitely taken over filching and its older accomplice, stealing. It would be interesting to know whether that was also true in the late 1700s.

  10. Jun 15, 2014 · I am stumped in trying to remember the British expression used as a derogatory slant on being relegated, demoted, assigned to a lower position, reduced in rank, or (quite literally) being reassigne...