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When it comes to the crunchMeaningWhen a decisive point at which one's future course is determined. OriginThis isn't a particularly old phrase. The first citation I can find of the phrase in that form is from The Times, July 1960:
What is 'the crunch' exactly? Crunch isn't commonly used as a noun, but it seems that the word was taken up by Winston Churchill, who was fond of using it to describe challenges; for example, he was reported in The Daily Telegraph as saying in 1939:
Of course, Churchill was a widely reported and influential author and speaker and his use of language was much imitated. The phrase when it comes to the crunch directly followed from his earlier mode of speech. In more recent times the comedy team The Mighty Boosh made a joke out of pretending The Crunch was a real place. In the inspired Nanageddon, an episode in their second TV series, they had this dialogue:
Tudor Phrases and Sayings - a book on the meanings and origins of the phrases and sayings that Shakespeare and Henry VIII used that we use still use every day. |