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Definition 2024
sparrow-fart
sparrow-fart
See also: sparrowfart and sparrow fart
English
Alternative forms
Noun
sparrow-fart (uncountable) (plural attested only as sparrowfarts)
- (uncountable, Britain, Australia, slang) A time very early in the day; dawn.
- 1993, Patti Walkuski, No Bed of Roses: Memoirs of a Madam, page 111,
- “I was sick of working from sparrow fart as station cook and general dogs-body.”
- 2005, Alexander Fullerton, Non-Combatants, Hachette UK, unnumbered page,
- ‘Took a girl to the flicks, had to get her back to Birkenhead, some goon in a tin hat and armband ordered us to take shelter in the Underground. No bloody option. So I didn′t get her home until sparrow-fart and her father didn′t believe us, turned quite nasty.’
- 2005, Edward Canfor-Dumas, The Buddha, Geoff and Me: A Modern Story, page 110,
- I′d got up at sparrow-fart and schlepped out there on the train, because Piers had been coming from Oxford and couldn′t give me a lift.
- 2012, Gerald Seymour, The Outsiders, Hachette UK, unnumbered page,
- ‘Tomorrow. Sleep over, then off at sparrow-fart. And the car will have plates.’
- 1993, Patti Walkuski, No Bed of Roses: Memoirs of a Madam, page 111,
- (countable) A person or thing of no consequence.
- 1922, James Joyce Ulysses, Episode 18: Penelope,
- […] Miss This Miss That Miss Theother lot of sparrowfarts skitting around talking about politics they know as much about as my backside […]
- 1965, Kurt Vonnegut, God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater, 2011, unnumbered page,
- ‘The **** with the talented sparrowfarts who write delicately of one small piece of one mere lifetime, when the issues are galaxies, eons, and trillions of souls yet to be born.’
- 1922, James Joyce Ulysses, Episode 18: Penelope,
Usage notes
The sense is also rendered in non-idiomatic constructions such as “when the sparrow farts.”
Synonyms
- (dawn): cockcrow, crack of dawn, sunrise, sunup
Translations
very early in the day
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person or thing of no consequence
References
- ↑ 2007, Nigel Rees, A Word In Your Shell-Like, states the definition “break of day” is included in 1828, William Carr, The Dialect of Craven [Horæ momenta Cravenæ], ISBN 978-0-554-43398-1.