set the Thames on fire

English dictionary entry

Meanings

verb
  1. To achieve something amazing but to a nearly-impossible degree; to do something which brings great public acclaim.

Pronunciation

en-au-set the Thames on fire.ogg

Word forms

set the Thames on fire sets the Thames on fire setting the Thames on fire

Etymology

Unknown. Suggested to derive from a misconstrual of temse (“sieve”): thus, to work so vigorously as to heat a sieve by friction. Alternatively, a reference to lightning strikes which sometimes occurred along the Thames, occasionally setting trees on fire or causing death in unusual manner. Otherwise simply by hyperbole, from the improbability of setting a river on fire (although the image might sound like a familiar reference to the Great London fire of 1666).

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