[Ads-l] "a buck" revisited
Jesse Sheidlower
jester at PANIX.COM
Fri May 15 12:44:18 UTC 2015
The HDAS entry does include a sense '_Broadly_, one hundred of anything,
as points of a batting average of pounds of weight'.
Jesse Sheidlower
On Fri, May 15, 2015 at 08:17:57AM -0400, Laurence Horn wrote:
> We've had at least one former thread on extended uses of "a buck" in various cases of metaphorical extension, referring to 100. So someone can weigh a buck seventy (170), someone can be caught driving a buck twenty (120 mph), something can cost a buck fifty ($150, not necessarily $1.50). Can't recall when the thread was. But there was a new one on me (and on Mike & Mike this morning) via a radio call of last night's playoff game: the announcer for the Houston Rockets, who drew even with the L.A. Clippers after an improbable fourth-quarter comeback, screaming about the Rockets tying it up at "a buck oh two", i.e. making it 102-102. Anyone familiar with "a buck oh two" meaning '102 points', or even just "a buck" = '100 points'?
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> LH
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> The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org
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The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org
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