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单词 horse and horse
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horse and horse
d. Other phrases and proverbs. horses for courses: a theory that each racehorse is suited to a particular race-course, and will do better on that course than on any other; also figurative; horse and horse (U.S.): equally matched, neck and neck; the horse's mouth: the original, authentic source of information, esp. in straight from the horse's mouth; horse-and-buggy (U.S.): bygone, old-fashioned (apparently used as quasi-n. in quot. 1926).
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the world > relative properties > relationship > equality or equivalence > [adjective] > equal or well-matched
fadging?1611
hand in hand1779
even Steven1837
horse and horsea1859
toe-to-toe1942
the world > relative properties > order > agreement, harmony, or congruity > suitability or appropriateness > suitable or appropriate [phrase]
it is worthy thata1398
in placea1568
in character1733
horses for courses1898
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > racing or race > horse racing > [noun] > theory
horses for courses1898
the world > time > relative time > the past > oldness or ancientness > [adjective] > old-fashioned or antiquated
moth-frettenOE
antiquate?a1425
antique?1532
rusty1549
moth-eaten1551
musty1575
worm-eatenc1575
overyear1584
out of date1589
old-fashioned1592
out of date1592
worm-eat1597
old-fashion1599
ancient1601
outdated1616
out-of-fashion1623
over-aged1623
superannuateda1634
thorough-old1639
overdateda1641
trunk-hosea1643
antiquitated1645
antiquated1654
out-of-fashioned1671
unmodern1731
of the old school1749
auld-farrant1750
old-fangled1764
fossila1770
fogram1772
passé1775
unmodernized1775
oxidated1791
moss-covered1792
square-toeda1797
old-fashionable1807
pigtail1817
behind the times1826
slow1827
fossilized1828
rococo1836
antiquish1838
old-timey1850
out of season1850
moss-grown1851
old style1858
antiqued1859
pigtaily1859
prehistoric1859
backdated1862
played1864
fossiled1866
bygone1869
mossy-backed1870
old-worldly1878
past-time1889
outmoded1896
dated1900
brontosaurian1909
antiquey1926
horse-and-buggy1926
vintage1928
Neolithic1934
time-warped1938
demoded1941
steam age1941
hairy1946
old school1946
rinky-dink1946
time warp1954
Palaeolithic1957
retardataire1958
throwback1968
wally1969
antwacky1975
society > communication > information > action of informing > [noun] > source of information
intelligencera1586
hand1614
source1788
vein1838
reference work1839
reference source1888
the horse's mouth1928
help-line1980
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > foundation in fact, validity > [noun] > authenticity > as source of information
the horse's mouth1928
c1175 Lamb. Hom. 9 Hwa is þet mei þet hors wettrien þe him self nule drinken?
c1300 Prov. Hending xxvii He is fre of hors þat ner nade non, quoþ Hendyng.
1390 J. Gower Confessio Amantis II. 392 What man hath hors men yiven him hors.
1541 Schole House of Women sig. D.iv Rub a scalde horse vpon the gall And he wyll byte.
1546 J. Heywood Dialogue Prouerbes Eng. Tongue i. xi. sig. Diii A man may well bryng a horse to the water. But he can not make hym drynke without he will.
1546 J. Heywood Dialogue Prouerbes Eng. Tongue ii. ix. sig. Kiv That some man maie steale a hors better, Than some other maie stande and loke vpone.
1546 J. Heywood Dialogue Prouerbes Eng. Tongue ii. ix. sig. Liii For it is..A proude hors that wil not beare his own prouander.
1573 J. Sanford tr. L. Guicciardini Hours Recreat. (1576) 208 He that can not beate the Horsse, beateth the saddle.
1577 B. Googe tr. C. Heresbach Foure Bks. Husbandry i. f. 16v The weather being faire, you bring a Horse to the Feelde (as they say) when you speake to me of going abrode.
1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues at Cheval The best-shod horse doth slip sometimes.
1640 G. Herbert Outlandish Proverbs in Wks. (Warne) 383 Choose a horse made and a wife to make.
1660 S. Pepys Diary 2 Feb. (1970) I. 38 After all this, we went to a sport called Selling of a Horse for a Dish of Eggs and Herrings; and sat talking there till almost 12 a-clock.
1672 W. Walker Paroemiologia Anglo-Lat. 37 It is a good horse that never stumbles.
a1859 in J. R. Bartlett Dict. Americanisms (1859) 204 I sot down to old sledge along with Jake Stebbins. It was horse and horse, and his deal.
1869 W. C. Hazlitt Eng. Prov. & Phr. 215 I'll not hang my bells on one horse: That is, give all to one son.
1897 Marquis of Salisbury in Ho. Lords 19 Jan. Many members of this House will keenly feel the nature of the mistake that was made when I say that we put all our money upon the wrong horse.
1898 A. E. T. Watson Turf vii. 160 A familiar phrase on the turf is ‘horses for courses’.
1908 G. H. Lorimer Jack Spurlock i. 3 It was horse and horse between the professors.
1926 G. H. Maines & B. Grant Wise-crack Dict. 9/2 Horse and buggy, young lady out of date—with long hair.
1927 K. Eubank (title) Horse and buggy days.
1928 P. G. Wodehouse in Strand Mag. Aug. 114/1 The prospect of getting the true facts—straight, as it were, from the horse's mouth—held him..fascinated.
1929 Daily Express 7 Nov. 18/4 Followers of the ‘horses for courses’ theory.
1929 A. Huxley Let. 1 Dec. (1969) 320 One or other of us may very likely be over..when there will be a chance of getting your news ‘straight from the horse's mouth’.
1930 F. Yeats-Brown Bengal Lancer xii. 172 We discuss..what Sir Mark Sykes said, straight from the horse's mouth.
1934 C. Day Lewis Hope for Poetry vi. 29 A pandemonium of slogans,..tips from the horse's mouth, straight talks,..etc.
1944 J. Cary (title) The horse's mouth.
1949 This Week Mag. 9 Jan. 5/1 Wherever this horse-and-buggy court is held, your chances of going scot-free are slim.
1957 Times Lit. Suppl. 11 Oct. 609/1 She thinks that our docility, our patience, our contentedness or even complacency with charming, outmoded, horse-and-buggy ways of doing things are, as reflected in the public will, endangering our country's future.
1958 Listener 7 Aug. 207/1 Keats' letters remain the horse's mouth.
1958 Listener 2 Oct. 536/1 Mr. Butler [sc. a sculptor] spoke his own commentary: it was an odd mixture of naïveté and insight, a ‘horse's mouth’ statement vastly preferable to some smooth literary piece by an art critic.
1962 Daily Tel. 23 Oct. 15/3 (headline) End of ‘horse and buggy’ medicine.
1963 Punch 18 Sept. 430/1 People enjoy what they are capable of enjoying—horses for courses.
1972 Daily Tel. 12 July 10/5 Horses for courses is a sound adage in motoring as well as the turf, and few British motorists would look to Czechoslovakia for their car.
1972 J. L. Dillard Black Eng. vi. 242 Such horse-and-buggy terms as whiffletree and singletree.
extracted from horsen.
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