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British Regiment Die Disappear Change Slowly Expression Criminals

Word die hard
Description disappear or change very slowly

This expression seems to have been used first of criminals who died resisting to the last on the Tyburn gallows in London. At the battle of Albuera in 1811 during the Peninsular War, William Inglis, commander of the British 57th Regiment of Foot exhorted his men to die hard. They acted with such heroism that the regiment earned the nickname Die-hards. The name was attached later in the century to various groupings in British politics who were determinedly opposed to change. The word diehard is still often used of someone who is stubbornly conservative or reactionary. disappear or change very slowly

This expression seems to have been used first of criminals who died resisting to the last on the Tyburn gallows in London. At the battle of Albuera in 1811 during the Peninsular War, William Inglis, commander of the British 57th Regiment of Foot exhort

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