Bell O'dea Funeral Home Brookline

POWELL Caitlin O’Dea. In Brookline on . Loving daughter of Colleen (O’Dea) Powell and Jeffry Powell. Visiting hours will be held on Tuesday in the Bell-O’Dea Funeral Home, 376 ...

bell o'dea funeral home brookline 1

"Ask not for whom the bell tolls" is a popular cliche. My understanding is that it comes from John Donne's Meditation XVII (1623). But in Donne's poem, the line is any man's death diminishes me,

bell o'dea funeral home brookline 2

The usage of “lint” in computing is derived by analogy from the more common and traditional usage of lint referring to clothing, as suggested below: Stephen C. Johnson, a computer scientist at Bell Labs, came up with the term "lint" in 1978 while debugging the yacc grammar he was writing for C and dealing with portability issues stemming from porting Unix to a 32-bit machine. The term was ...

bell o'dea funeral home brookline 3

Personally I like "You can't unring that bell" as deadrat mentioned above. The phrase refers to the fact that you can't un-hear a bell that has been rung. There's a nice essay about its history here: Unring the Bell (impossibility of taking back a statement or action)

bell o'dea funeral home brookline 4

For example, he struck a bell when the dogs were fed. If the bell was sounded in close association with their meal, the dogs learnt to associate the sound of the bell with food. After a while, at the mere sound of the bell, they responded by drooling. Another possible origin is the one this page advocates:

bell o'dea funeral home brookline 5

etymology - What is the origin of "rings a bell"? - English Language ...

idioms - For whom the bell tolls - origin of "ask not" instead of ...