that tired feeling

English

Advertising Poster

Etymology

From the advertising slogan "For “That Tired Feeling” take Hood's Sarsaparilla", coined by Charles I. Hood (1845-1922). (See citations.)

Noun

that tired feeling

  1. An extended lethargy.
    • 1894 October 14, “In Printer's Ink, the Secret”, in The New York Times, volume XLIV, page 21:
      His great advertising line, “For That Tired Feeling Take Hood's,” has come into national fame.
    • 1894 May, Frank Kraft, “That Tired Feeling”, in The Medical Advance, volume XXXI, number 5, pages 293–4:
      ... That Tired Feeling is at the bottom of all distressing complaints and is the bane of our latter-day civilization.
    • 1922, Boyd Fisher, Mental Causes of Accidents, Houghton Mifflin Company, page 225:
      He knows that “that tired feeling” may be most acute at the beginning of the spell of work, and wear away as one warms up.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.