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  • A Dictionary of Euphemisms: How Not To Say What You Mean

    A Dictionary of Euphemisms by Holder, R. W.;

    How Not To Say What You Mean

    Series: Oxford Paperback Reference;

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      • Publisher's listprice GBP 8.99
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    Product details:

    • Edition number 3
    • Publisher Oxford University Press
    • Date of Publication 9 October 2003

    • ISBN 9780198607625
    • Binding Paperback
    • No. of pages524 pages
    • Size 196x129x27 mm
    • Weight 360 g
    • Language English
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    Short description:

    Now in paperback, this brand new edition of A Dictionary of Euphemisms: How Not To Say What You Mean is still as lively a guide to the language of evasion, hypocrisy, prudery, and deceit as you could wish for. Packed full of the old favourites, such as 'early bath' or 'push up the daisies', as well as euphemisms from modern times, like 'human sacrifice', 'coffee-housing', and 'tuft-hunter'.

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    Long description:

    Now in paperback, this brand new edition of A Dictionary of Euphemisms: How Not To Say What You Mean is still as lively a guide to the language of evasion, hypocrisy, prudery, and deceit as you could wish for. Packed full of the old favourites, such as 'early bath' or 'push up the daisies', as well as euphemisms from modern times, like 'human sacrifice', 'coffee-housing', and 'tuft-hunter'.

    Definitions include examples from literature and the press, along with historical explanations of origins, and now obsolete euphemisms like 'leaping house', 'nightingale' are signposted as such. And to prove that the use of euphemisms is not just a British speciality, there is widespread coverage of American euphemisms too: 'English' (pertaining to sexual deviance), 'watermelon' (an indication of pregnancy).

    The Oxford Dictionary of Euphemisms is a gold mine for anyone who enjoys words

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    Table of Contents:

    Contents
    An Explanation
    Bibliography
    Dictionary of Euphemisms
    Thematic Index

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