In Trouble




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In Trouble : Phrases



Meaning:

A euphemism for pregnant - especially when out of wedlock.



Example:







Origin:

Victorian England wasn't as socially hidebound and coy as it is popularly supposed, but this euphemism did originate there.

In 1891, Thomas Hardy wrote this in Tess of the D'Urbervilles:

"On no account do you say a word of your Bygone Trouble to him... Many a woman - some of the Highest in the Land - have had a Trouble in their time."

The same year, the Daily News included this in a report:

"She said she consented to come to London to be married to the prisoner as she believed she was in trouble."








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