land sakes
English
Alternative forms
Interjection
- (chiefly US, somewhat dated and rustic) An expression of surprise or dismay.
- 1886, Horatio Alger, Helping Himself, ch. 28:
- "Land sakes! I don't keep a boardin' house!"
- 1912, Victor Appleton, Lulu, Alice and Jimmie Wibblewobble, ch. 31:
- Well, as soon as Alice finished singing, land sakes! goodness, gracious me! if a big fox didn't pop out from behind a tree.
- 1983 June 19, Philip Shenon, "For Homesick Mississippians, a Day Full of Grits and Grins," New York Times (retrieved 3 Nov 2015):
- The fourth annual “Way Up North in Mississippi” picnic was well under way in Central Park yesterday. . . . There were twangy cries of “land sakes” and “don't that beat all” and choruses of “hi, y'all.”
- 2015, Lori Copeland, My Heart Stood Still, →ISBN, p. 41 (Google preview):
- “One of the McDougal young'uns? Well, land sakes—haven't seen you in a coon's age.”
- 1886, Horatio Alger, Helping Himself, ch. 28:
Synonyms
Anagrams
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