- What does the phrase in the weeds mean?
- Where does the phrase in the weeds come from?
- What does digging in the weeds mean?
- What does 87 mean in a restaurant?
- What does Refire mean in a kitchen?
- Why do chefs say all day in the kitchen?
- What’s the origin of the phrase “into the weeds”?
- What weeds can tell you?
What does the phrase in the weeds mean?
In the weeds is restaurant slang used to describe a server who is hopelessly behind. An online glossary of restaurant terms puts it like this: “A colloquial expression used when persons are near or beyond their capacity to handle a situation or cannot catch up. Struggling. Very busy.”
Where does the phrase in the weeds come from?
It became popular again during Prohibition in the 1920s, possibly describing the hiding of bootleg liquor in thick weeds and bushes since storing on the premises was a liability and illegal.
What does too far into the weeds mean?
Totally immersed or preoccupied with the details or complexities (of something). I’d like to come out tonight, but I’m deep into the weeds with my thesis.
What does staying out of the weeds mean?
It means, “don’t say too much that the customer doesn’t need/want to know.”
What does digging in the weeds mean?
What does 87 mean in a restaurant?
The code could vary from one establishment to the next: In a 1938 article about soda counters in the Los Angeles Times, 87, not 86, is the signal given for “we’ve run out of that item on the menu.”
What does eighty-six it mean?
Eighty-six is slang meaning “to throw out,” “to get rid of,” or “to refuse service to.” It comes from 1930s soda-counter slang meaning that an item was sold out. There is varying anecdotal evidence about why the term eighty-six was used, but the most common theory is that it is rhyming slang for nix.
What does the word weeds mean in the Bible?
These are the people who belong to the Kingdom of God and who will go to Heaven at the end of time. The weeds represent those people who do not listen to God’s word, they are “sons of the evil one” who will go to the fiery furnace of hell at the end of time.
What does Refire mean in a kitchen?
Refire. A dish that needs to be remade on the fly.
Why do chefs say all day in the kitchen?
In chef slang, the expression all day is used to indicate the total number of orders needed. As tickets come in, a chef will shout out the orders followed by all day. If there are three orders of fries on one ticket and four orders of fries on another ticket, there are seven orders of fries all day.
What does 86 myself mean?
Legend has it that crooked police would warn the bar of an impending raid. The bartender would then 86 the customers, or kick them out, so they wouldn’t be arrested. You won’t see that on a contemporary list of bartender duties. A term for death.
What does ‘getting in the weeds’ mean?
What does “getting in the weeds” mean? It means you or the restaurant is way behind serving the customers. Getting in the weeds is easy, getting out not so much. Imagine it’s 5:30 pm on Saturday and you and the rest of the front of house staff are waiting for the rush.
What’s the origin of the phrase “into the weeds”?
Dear Word Detective: The phrase “getting into the weeds” is widely used to mean “getting into the details,” often with the inference of getting into too much detail. I have a guess about the origin of this phrase which is that it comes from harvesting. If you’re “getting into the weeds” your machine or tool is going closer to the ground than necessary to get most of the grain and is picking up weeds along with the crop.
What weeds can tell you?
Weeds can tell you a lot about the soil in your landscape, so don’t pull the messengers! At least, not before you hear what they have to say. Just like the ornamental plants you’d probably prefer to grow, many weeds have strong habitat preferences.
What do weeds symbolize?
a plant out of place and not intentionally sown