eighty-six
English
| < 85 | 86 | 87 > |
|---|---|---|
| Cardinal : eighty-six Ordinal : eighty-sixth | ||
Etymology 1
Numeral
- The cardinal number immediately following eighty-five and preceding eighty-seven.
Synonyms
Translations
cardinal number 86
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Etymology 2
Unknown for certain. Possibly rhyming slang for nix (“cancel, say no to”) (given by the OED), or possibly part of a code of such numbers, created in the 1920s.
See also: Wikipedia:86 (term)
Verb
eighty-six (third-person singular simple present eighty-sixes, present participle eighty-sixing, simple past and past participle eighty-sixed)
- (colloquial) To cancel an order for food.
- "eighty-six the ham and eggs for table two!"
- (colloquial) To remove an item from the menu.
- eighty-six the lobster bisque - we won't have the lobster delivery until tomorrow.
- "Yes, I'd like the tomato soup." / "I'm sorry sir, that's been eighty-sixed - would you like a salad instead?"
- (colloquial) To remove or eject, as a disruptive customer
- Ryan and his friends got too rowdy at the bar, so they were eighty-sixed.
- (colloquial) To throw out; discard.
- "We finally had to eighty-six that old printer after it jammed one too many times."
- "...Apple eighty-sixed all of its paid moderators..." --MacAddict January 2007, p. 25
Synonyms
Translations
colloquial: to throw out
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References
- “Eighty-six” in Michael Quinion, Ballyhoo, Buckaroo, and Spuds: Ingenious Tales of Words and Their Origins, Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Books in association with Penguin Books, 2004, →ISBN.
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