Home

 › 

Lifestyle

 › 

Obsolete Expressions: Words and Phrases Disappearing from English

Obsolete Expressions: Words and Phrases Disappearing from English

Cast Of Thousands / Shutterstock.com

Zephyr

Source: shock399 / Flickr

Cuddy

Source: wbritten / Getty Images

Trash mover

Source: HaraldEWeiss / iStock via Getty Images

Pearls Before Swine

Source: fizkes / iStock via Getty Images

Tacker

Source: Yavdat / Shutterstock

Barn burner

Source: Vladimir Borovic / Shutterstock.com

Pot cheese

Source: Pixel-Shot / Shutterstock.com

With Flying Colors

Source: Drazen Zigic / Shutterstock.com

Verily

Source: Mix and Match Studio / Shutterstock.com

Floppy Disk

Source: Maxiphoto / Getty Images

Cad

Source: pathdoc / Shutterstock.com

Overmorrow

Source: kyoshino / E+ via Getty Images

Supper

Source: bonchan / Shutterstock.com

Cassette

Source: Grenar / Shutterstock.com

Facetious

Source: filadendron / E+ via Getty Images

Know Your Onions

Source: Likoper / Shutterstock.com

A Dog's Dinner

Source: Elena Nichizhenova / Shutterstock.com

Hootenanny

Source: bernardbodo / iStock via Getty Images

Dungarees

Source: nnattalli / Shutterstock.com

Parlor

Source: Kokako / iStock via Getty Images

Zephyr
Cuddy
Trash mover
Pearls Before Swine
Tacker
Barn burner
Pot cheese
With Flying Colors
Verily
Floppy Disk
Cad
Overmorrow
Supper
Cassette
Facetious
Know Your Onions
A Dog's Dinner
Hootenanny
Dungarees
Parlor

English is often considered one of the world's strangest languages. It is a mashup of multiple languages, has crazy grammar rules and interesting pronunciations – you polish your Polish crystal – and doesn't gender nouns like most European languages. According to many linguists, it is one of the weirdest languages, with more vowels and unusual consonant sounds than most other languages. English has evolved quite significantly since it was created in the 5th century CE. Old English and Modern English have given way to Present-day English. This has led to obsolete expressions: words and phrases disappearing from English.

Many words that were commonplace a century ago now see little use. New terms are always being invented that work better, new ideas outdoing old ones, or some combination of the two, causing many words and phrases to become obsolete. They may have fallen out of use but sometimes, old words can come back into popularity. Like the phrase, "with flying colors," listed below. (Check out these popular slang words no one uses anymore.)

To compile a list of obsolete expressions: words and phrases disappearing from English, 24/7 Tempo consulted a range of dictionaries, lifestyle publications, and other websites, including Merriam-Webster and Education First. Next, we selected words and phrases from a wide range of usages, origins, and impacts. After that, we consulted sites like the Online Etymology Dictionary and World Wide Words for specific information and etymologies of the words.

To top