Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. To be ‘browned off’ is to be bored or fed-up. What's the origin of the phrase 'Browned off'? ‘Browned off’ is most widely associated with the British forces, especially the RAF, and is generally dated from around the time of WWII. There’s no definitive documentary evidence for that association.

  3. Aug 13, 2007 · browned off. Fed up, pissed off, disappointed. Thought by some to have come from a euphemism for 'buggered', it is actually of 14th Century English origin, the original phrase was to be in a "Brown study", where 'brown' = dark & sombre, 'study' = a daydreamy state.

  4. If you say that you are browned off, you mean that you are annoyed and depressed. [mainly British, informal] Sorry, I'm just thoroughly browned off. Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner’s Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers.

  5. This expression originated as Royal Air Force slang for “disgusted” and “depressed” in the late 1930s and had crossed the Atlantic by World War II. It gradually came to be used more widely as a slangy synonym for “infuriated.”

  6. adjective: (idiomatic, slang) Annoyed, upset, angry, bored, fed up, disgusted. Similar: browned-off, embrowned, baffed out, brown, done up, nettled, beetle-browed, Brinded, miffed, rotted, more... Opposite: pleased, satisfied, content, happy. Types: fed up, sick of, tired of, bored of, more... Phrases:

  7. browned off. adjective [ after verb ] UK old-fashioned informal uk / ˌbraʊnd ˈɒf / us / ˌbraʊnd ˈɑːf /. Add to word list. annoyed: I think she gets a bit browned off with him borrowing the car all the time. Synonyms. cheesed off UK informal. exasperated.

  8. Browned off. British military slang for disgruntled and fed up dates from WWI according to Eric Partridge who also maintains that the expression has earlier (late 19th century) connotations of sodomy. Such connotations, however, are not known nor intended by most users of the expression.

  1. People also search for