No best young. This aspersing acknowledgment has been fabricated back the aboriginal eighteenth aeon and, as far as can be gathered, is activated mostly to women. Men hardly are accused of crumbling in aloof this way. In print, it appeared (without “spring”) in Addison and Steele’s The Spectator (1711) and anon afterwards was taken up by Jonathan Swift in Stella’s Birthday (1720): “Pursue your barter of scandal-picking, Your hints that Stella is no chicken.”Learn more: no, springLearn more:
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類似の言葉の辞書、別の表現、同義語、イディオム イディオム no spring chicken, (she's)