He is said to have asked “How does the bread smell?” when asking how much a gig was going to pay.īuckaroos - How much does that hat cost? Like 50 buckaroos.Ĭ-Note - A $100 bill. Enjoy your bougie $80 dinner, I’m fine with my Taco Bell.īrass - From the song “Brass in Pocket” by The Pretenders.īread - May have originated from jazz great Lester Young.
#Dictionary of slang ancient plus#
Possibly originated from the 12th century, when a church in the English town of Dunmow promised a side of bacon to any married man who could show marital devotion.īees and honey - Cockney rhyming slang for money.īenjamins - From the song “It’s All About the Benjamins” by then-Puff Daddy: “Five plus Fives, who drive Millenniums / It’s all about the Benjamins, what?”īling - From the song “Bling Bling” by Lil Wayne: “Everytime I buy a new ride / Bling bling”īougie - Derived from bourgeois. Kipe - To steal or snatch a commonly shoplifted item.īacon - You have to get to work so you can bring home the bacon. I greased the seater so I could get stronger drinks. They are losing a lot of money because people are ganking their cardboard. The Random House Historical Dictionary of American Slang also links this use of “gas” to jazz.Gank - To steal. The earliest Oxford citation is from “The Hepsters Dictionary” (1944), a brief glossary by Cab Calloway: “When it comes to dancing, she’s a gasser.” The OED doesn’t speculate about the origins of this sense of “gas,” but it points the reader to a related slang word, “gasser,” which it says originated as a jazz term. Here’s a more recent example from Paul Auster’s 1990 novel The Music of Chance: “ ‘I’m looking forward to it immensely.’ ‘Me too, Bill,’ Pozzi said. The earliest citation in the OED is from “Sonny’s Blues,” a 1957 short story by James Baldwin in The Partisan Review: “Brand-new pianos certainly were a gas.” However, the usage you’re asking about (the use of “it’s a gas” or variants to mean it’s a lot of fun) didn’t show up in print until the mid-20th century, according to written examples in the dictionary. In “An Encounter,” a story about two boys who skip school, Mahony tells the narrator that he’s brought along a slingshot “to have some gas with the birds.” The OED’s first citation for the usage is from Dubliners, James Joyce’s 1914 story collection. It wasn’t until the 20th century that the word “gas” took on the sense of “enjoyment, amusement, fun” in Irish English.
“It has been used as a general anaesthetic in dentistry and surgery, and also illicitly as a recreational drug.” “Laughing gas is so called from the euphoric intoxication it causes when inhaled at low concentrations,” the OED says. The OED’s earliest example of “laughing gas” used for nitrous oxide is from a June 23, 1819, issue of the Times of London that refers to the “chymical experiments on gas at 9, when the laughing gas will be exhibited.” The word’s modern sense of a shapeless substance that “expands freely to fill the whole of a container” dates from the late 17th century, according to Oxford citations.Īs for nitrous oxide, the gas was first synthesized by the English chemist Joseph Priestly in 1772, and first used to anesthetize a dental patient in 1844. The first use of “gas” in English, according to OED citations, was in a 1662 translation of van Helmont’s 1648 work Ortus Medicinæ: “for want of a name, I have called that vapour, Gas, being not far severed from the Chaos of the Auntients.” John Ayto’s Dictionary of Word Origins notes that van Helmont used a Dutch version of the Greek chaos “to denote an occult principle, supposedly an ultra-refined form of water, which he postulated as existing in all matter.” The Chambers Dictionary of Etymology says the Dutch word used by van Helmont was probably an alteration of chaos, the ancient Greek word for empty space.Ĭhambers says the letter “g” in Dutch “represents a sound somewhat like the modern Greek sound transliterated as ch.”
van Helmont, according to the Oxford English Dictionary. The use of “gas” to mean a vapor was coined in the mid-1600s by the Flemish physician and chemist J. In writing about the Irish English use of “gas” to mean fun, Partridge adds this brief notation: “Ex ‘ laughing gas’?” Q: Does the expression “It’s a gas” (meaning “It’s a lot of fun”) come from the use of laughing gas?Ī: It’s possible that the use of “a gas” to mean a lot of fun may somehow be connected with the common name for nitrous oxide, but we haven’t found any solid evidence to support this.Įric Partridge, in A Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English, speculates about such a connection, but he doesn’t come to any conclusion.