Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. In the UK a complete failuresgo down like a lead balloon’. The phrase is American in origin and the first mention of a lead balloon with the meaning of something that fails comes from a Mom-N Pop cartoon that was syndicated in several US newspapers in June 1924.

  2. GO OVER LIKE A LEAD BALLOON definición: to fail to arouse interest, enthusiasm , or support | Significado, pronunciación, traducciones y ejemplos.

  3. Utterly fail. The analogy is to a lighter-than-air vehicle made of a heavy metal, forcing it to sink. The term dates from about 1950. The Los Angeles Times had it, “ ‘Malcolm Arnold’s ‘Grand, Grand Overture’ for vacuum cleaners went over like, ah, a lead balloon” (August 27, 1983).

  4. If something that you say or show to people goes down like a lead balloon, they do not like it at all: My joke about the alcoholic went down like a lead balloon . SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases

  5. To Go Over Like a Lead Balloon Meaning. Definition: An idea or an attempt that is a total failure with no support from others. The American version of the phrase is go over like a lead balloon. The British version of the phrase is go down like a lead balloon.

  6. Fig. to fail completely; to go over badly. Your joke went over like a lead balloon. If that play was supposed to be a comedy, it went over like a lead balloon. Her suggestion went over like a lead balloon.

  7. Idiom: Go over like a lead balloon. Meaning: If something goes over like a lead balloon, it will not work well, or go over well. Country: American English | Subject Area: General | Usage Type: Both or All Words Used. Contributor: Alea Roach.