Fichier de travail (INPUT) : ./DUMP-TEXT/spring_common_acceptions/utf8-6-17.txt
Encodage utilisé (INPUT) : UTF-8
Forme recherchée : [Ss]pring|[Pp]rintemps|[Ff]r[üu][.]*hling|[Ff]r[üu][.]*hjahr|[Ll]enz
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- Ligne n°25 : Re: No spring chicken!
- Ligne n°29 : In Reply to: Re: No spring chicken! posted by Shae on March 29, 2004
- Ligne n°36 : : : : SPRING CHICKEN - "We find the expression 'now past a chicken,'
Ligne n°37 : meaning 'no longer young,' recorded as early as 1711 by Steele in 'The ...
Ligne n°39 : ... Humour, which was well enough in a Girl, is insufferable in one of your- Ligne n°40 : Motherly Character.' 'No spring chicken,' an exaggeration of the
Ligne n°41 : phrase, is first recorded in America in 1906." From "Encyclopedia of ...
Ligne n°46 : ... chicken, having tender meat. Some restaurant menus describe an offering- Ligne n°47 : as spring chicken to convince customers that the bird was slaughtered
Ligne n°48 : at the peak of perfection. This phrase doesn't seem to be applied to ...
Ligne n°49 : ... people very often anymore. Middle-aged and elderly women used to say- Ligne n°50 : "I'm no spring chicken," meaning they were past young adulthood, when
Ligne n°51 : talking about their attractiveness or their health and energy level. ...- Ligne n°53 : : Type 'spring chicken' in the Seach box for more.
- Ligne n°55 : From the archives under "spring chicken""
- Ligne n°62 : spring chicken 1 A young inexperienced person. Alkways used in "no
Ligne n°63 : spring chicken." 1907 [1894]: "I was no spring chicken in the way of ...
Ligne n°62 : ... spring chicken 1 A young inexperienced person. Alkways used in "no- Ligne n°63 : spring chicken." 1907 [1894]: "I was no spring chicken in the way of
- Ligne n°63 : spring chicken." 1907 [1894]: "I was no spring chicken in the way of
Ligne n°64 : the world...." Jack London, _My Life_. c1880. 2 A Young woman. Always ...
Ligne n°64 : ... the world...." Jack London, _My Life_. c1880. 2 A Young woman. Always- Ligne n°65 : in "[she's] no spring chicken." The most common use.
Ligne n°66 : From _Dictionary of American Slang_ by H. Wentworth & S.B. Flexner ...
Ligne n°67 : ... ----------- Ligne n°68 : Spring chicken. A young person. The phrase is usually found in the
Ligne n°69 : negative, as 'She's no spring chicken.' The implication is that she has ...
Ligne n°68 : ... Spring chicken. A young person. The phrase is usually found in the- Ligne n°69 : negative, as 'She's no spring chicken.' The implication is that she has
Ligne n°70 : reached an age when she is no longer a chick. A spring chicken is a ...
Ligne n°69 : ... negative, as 'She's no spring chicken.' The implication is that she has- Ligne n°70 : reached an age when she is no longer a chick. A spring chicken is a
Ligne n°71 : young fowl ready for eating, which was originally in the spring. The ...
Ligne n°70 : ... reached an age when she is no longer a chick. A spring chicken is a- Ligne n°71 : young fowl ready for eating, which was originally in the spring. The
Ligne n°72 : expression is of US origin and dates from the early years of the 20th ...
Ligne n°75 : ... ----------- Ligne n°76 : She wasn't a Spring chicken, by any means, yet she wasn't old. (_Daily
Ligne n°77 : Mail_, 1914) ...