go all around the Wrekin
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English[edit]
Etymology[edit]
From the Wrekin, a large and prominent hill in Shropshire.
Verb[edit]
go all around the Wrekin (third-person singular simple present goes all around the Wrekin, present participle going all around the Wrekin, simple past went all around the Wrekin, past participle gone all around the Wrekin)
- (West Midlands, idiomatic) Take a long time to arrive.
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- Jennifer Meierhans (2016 November 6) “England's oddest phrases explained”, in BBC News[1], BBC