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The clutching hand: Applied sometimes to a Quartermaster Sergeant, as being popularly supposed to benefit personally when there was a shortage of anything, rations, etc. The phrase would seem to have originated with a certain film melodrama of an exceptionally lurid kind. Also, an Air Force nickname for the "D.H.6" (De Havilland) aeroplane in use in 1917-1918 as an elementary training machine. [1]
References / notes
- ↑ Edward Fraser and John Gibbons (1925). Soldier and Sailor Words and Phrases. Routledge, London p.59.
Compendium of the Great War.
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This compendium forms the central hub of words, phrases, people, and places relative to the Great War period of 1914–1918. These also include battles, political events, ships, trench slang, British and American service terms and expressions in everyday use, nicknames, sobriquets, the titles of British and Commonwealth Regiments and their origins, and also warfare in general. These words and phrases are contemporary with the war, which is reflected in the language used, some of which may seem derogatory by today's standards. Feel free to expand upon and improve this content.