blue streak
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See also: bluestreak
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From the afterimage of a stroke of lightning, which looks like a blue streak across the sky.
Noun
[edit]- (informal, originally US) A great deal of fast talking, cursing, lying, or similar.
- 1847, The Knickerbocker, page 178:
- interspersing his vehement comments with a ‘blue streak’ of oaths
- 1895 September, The Century Magazine, page 676:
- He calmly lied to me a blue streak, and he knew that I knew he was lying
- 1951, Tennessee Williams, Oscar Saul, A Streetcar Named Desire, spoken by Blanche (Vivien Leigh):
- This old maid, she had a parrot that cursed a blue streak and knew more vulgar expressions than Mr. Kowalski.
- 2007, Sue Owens Wright, 150 Activities For Bored Dogs:
- If you leave your dog alone in your backyard for hours at a time, he may be barking a blue streak, too.
- A trace left by something that is too quick to see.
- 1830 May 14, Kentuckian, page 2/5:
- To pass […] with such rapidity as not even to leave a ‘blue streak’ behind him
- 1867, James Howard, A Trip to America: Two Lectures, page 35:
- An American engineer, who had been in England, described the Express train from Liverpool to London as running a "blue streak," by which he meant going like lightning.
- 1907, Mark Twain, A Horse's Tale:
- Now then, watch me leave a blue streak behind!
- 1977, Dick D'Easum, Sawtooth Tales, page 273:
- Running like a blue streak from your old mammy.
- 2006, Mignon C. Reynolds, Life as Bonkers, page 13:
- She was wild and crazy, and she could run a blue streak.
- 2014, Leroy Stover, Birmingham First Black in Blue:
- He (the suspect) should know better than to run from my partner Leroy, for he's like a blue streak.
Further reading
[edit]- “blue streak n.”, in Green’s Dictionary of Slang, Jonathon Green, 2016–present
- Grammarist