"Ah, how gracefully these wild northern men can turn a phrase!" whispered Chrysophrasia.
1906, Edith Nesbit, The Incomplete Amorist, ch. 3:
Everyone who was anyone at Long Barton spoke in careful and correct English, but no one ever troubled to turn a phrase.
2004, Elisabeth Egan, "A world of talking cats and lost, lonely boys" (review of Moe's Villa and Other Stories by James Purdy), San Francisco Chronicle, 5 Dec. (retrieved 4 June 2008):
Nobody, however, can take issue with Purdy's ability to turn a phrase. He has that rare Joycean knack for illuminating an entire universe with one simple detail.