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Broad in the BeamBroad in the Beam : PhrasesMeaning: Having wide hips or buttocks. Origin: This phrase derives from the nautical term beam - the widest point of a ship. Beam is first recorded in Captain John Smith's invaluable record of early seafaring terms - The Seaman's Grammar, 1627:
The figurative use of beam referring to people's hips came into being in the 20th century. An early citation of that comes in Hugh Walpole's Hans Frost, 1929:
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