I understood the term to be rhyming slang for 'For Free', origin un-known. I understood the term to be rhyming slang for 'For Free', origin un-known. See related link for answer.
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The phrase Girl Friday came from Man Friday after the native in Daniel Defoe's novel Robinson Crusoe (1719)
I don't understand what you mean by "connipition" since the question lacks clarity.
This term actually came from a '60's commercial. A character in the commercial asks the main character "How do you do that?" He's replies, "It's all in the wrists" I think was a "Livesavers" commercial or something. My memory isn't what it used to be.
The phrase cut to the chase originates from the time of silent movies. It means "get to the point", and refers to to climax of most movies of that era, when the climax was a chase scene. It is thought to have been coined by Hal Roach Sr., a television and movie producer of the time.
latin
The Bible
from joey in friends
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Since "Buck 298" has never been used as a phrase and certainly not in current N. American parlance, I believe it may be a product of your imagination.
1820-30
from girls ...to hissy...
in concord and lexington.
England
facebook entry
Andy Maio invent this phrase in the early 70s
One dollar.