Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Feb 21, 2014 · Wiktionary sez:. First attested in the 1960s in the context of aviation. Probably coined by pilots whose throttle levers had round, ball-like tops and for whom putting the "balls to the wall" (the firewall of the aircraft) meant making the aircraft fly as quickly as possible.

  2. Balls to the wall: extreme; "all out". This is the last game of the season, boys! So, it's balls to the wall!! That guy went balls to the wall to win that race. Balls to the wall: term used by pilots. when accelerating quickly, the throttle is pushed all the way to the panel and the throttle lever (ball) actually touches the panel (wall).

  3. Jan 18, 2021 · Feb 8, 2015 at 12:57. Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 has: off-the-wall adjective 1. (off the wall when postpositive) ( slang) new or unexpected in an unconventional or eccentric way: an off-the-wall approach to humour Word Origin C20: possibly from the use of the phrase in handball and squash to describe a shot that is ...

  4. Sep 13, 2014 · 2. A form of greeting used to the Japanese emperor. We Japanese stand up and shout “banzai” when watching TV featuring the scene Japanese baseball (women’s soccer) team wins the world baseball (women’s soccer) games. We also use “banzai” for the meaning of “total surrender” in association with the gesture of banzai holding up ...

  5. Jul 22, 2014 · Here’s a question again in Jeffery Archer’s The Prodigal Daughter.Richard (husband of Florentina Kane, the heroine of the novel) finds in The Wall Street Journal that Jake Thomas, chairman of Lester’s Bank, took a countermeasure to block Richard’s cornering the stock of the bank in an attempt to take over the chairmanship.

  6. Sep 7, 2014 · While your balls to the wall definition is colorful you didn't cite a source, which you might find in the American comic book, but I don't see how this relates to English Usage, as in the North (Norway) they do not speak English as their first language but one of two forms of Norweigen instead (one of which is thought to be a fey dialect).

  7. Feb 8, 2016 · As I recall, the writing on the wall was in fact written by a hand; so it may be an unusual translation, or something of the sort. – Tim Lymington Commented Jun 19, 2013 at 18:03

  8. 4. Wall of worry is an informal expression often used in financial jargon to refer to: a market uptrend that occurs when there is significant uncertainty about its sustainability. For example, if the market is concerned about potential, new regulations or the possibility of recession but stocks increase anyway, this is called climbing a wall of ...

  9. Apr 6, 2017 · In the years between the appearance of 'spitball' in the "missile" sense sometime prior to 1839, and its later use in the "wet ball" baseball sense, a number of semi-literal and figurative uses began to appear. Many of these refer to political and legal 'mud-slinging'. Such uses continue to this day.

  10. Jan 23, 2024 · You’ll be first against the wall, when the revolution comes or, Come the revolution, you’ll be first against the wall and variants thereof, particularly the shortening & implicitizing; First against the wall (and sometimes, rarely in my experience Come the revolution) And apparently the abbreviation FATW is common enough to rate capture in ...