Christine Lovatt's Desk

Welcome to Christine's Desk

Here you'll find a variety of puzzle themed items and pieces of information to hold your interest. Learn about some of the wonderful words and phrases in our everyday language, find out about the health benefits of crosswords and puzzles, be entertained by Christine's Hello column… and there's much more on offer. The latest submissions appear below. Thanks for dropping by and we hope you enjoy your visit.

Dressed to the nines

If you’re ‘dressed to the nines’ it doesn’t mean that you have nine layers of clothes on!

It actually means you are dressed very smartly or elaborately.

This phrase dates from the 18th century, and was already in use when Robert Burns used it in a poem in 1796, as ‘Twad please me to [more…]

Albert, Prince Consort

When Albert married his first cousin, Queen Victoria, it was a match of true love.

Francis Albert Augustus Charles Emmanuel was the second son of Ernest, duke of Saxe-Coburg, and Louise, daughter of Duke Augustus of Saxe-Coburg-Altenburg.

He was not initially popular with the people of Britain and was always in the background of public life. [more…]

Billy the Kid

A boy with a six-shooter in his hand – he wreaked havoc in the Wild West.

William McCarty, who took on the name William H. Bonney, and was also known as Kid Antrim, was one of the most notorious gunmen of the American South West.

Born in New York in 1859, he grew up in Silver [more…]

Dunlop

Did you know that the pneumatic tyre was invented by a veterinarian?

Scottish veterinarian, John Boyd Dunlop, began experimenting with an air-filled tube when it was recommended that his son take up cycling for exercise. The bumpy cobbled streets made cycling quite uncomfortable and Dunlop thought he would find a way to soften the ride.

He [more…]

Eric the Red

Flaming red hair gave the Viking Eric Thorvaldson his well-known nickname.

Eric (or Erik) was a Norwegian-born mariner, who became the first European to explore Greenland, though it seems other Norsemen had been there before him. He named it Greenland to indicate that it was more visually appealing that Iceland.

Eric was escaping murder charges in [more…]

Eva Peron – Evita

Amongst the younger generation, it is fairly safe to say that Eva Perón is known primarily as the woman Madonna portrayed in the musical film Evita.

Argentinians will agree however, that there was more to Perón than a movie and the following synopsis of her life is merely the tip of the iceberg.

María Eva Duarte [more…]

Shaka Zulu

Shaka kaSenzangakhonawas Zulu chief from 1818 – 1828. He changed the face of southern Africa by setting in motion the Mfecane and uniting the Zulu clans.

The Mfecane or ‘the crushing’, as the period became known, was a time of warfare and forced migrations. Zulu warriors, led by Shaka conquered and subjugated those in their [more…]

Earwig

Reference to this insect dates back a thousand years.

The word is derived from the Old English colloquial term for insect, which was wicga.

Pronounced as ‘widger’, this word is thought to have come from the prehistoric Germanic base wig and is roughly equivalent in feeling to the term creepy-crawly.

Many folk used to believe that earwigs [more…]

Creature Feature – 192

Extract from Crossed Wires BIG 192

Crocodile tears refers to an insincere display of emotion. This ancient expression, which was used in ancient Rome, comes from an ancient anecdote that crocodiles weep in order to lure their prey, or that they cry for the victims they are eating. It may come from the fact that [more…]