The Fexco 2024 concludes by breaking records in visits and economic
activity.
-
The International Fair and Exhibition of Cochabamba (Fexco) concluded
yesterday after 11 days of constant and intense activity. Preliminary
figures indi...
close call/shave, a
A narrow escape, a near miss. Both phrases are origi- nally American. The first dates from the 1880s and is thought to come from sports, where a close call was a decision by an umpire or referee that could have gone either way. A close shave is from the early nineteenth century and reflects the narrow margin between smoothly shaved skin and a nasty cut from the razor. Both were transferred to mean any narrow escape from dan- ger. Incidentally, a close shave was in much earlier days equated with miserli- ness. Erasmus’s 1523 collection of adages has it, “He shaves right to the quick,” meaning he makes the barber give him a very close shave so that he will not need another for some time. Two synonymous modern clichés are too close for comfort and too close to home.
0 comentarios:
Publicar un comentario