English edit

Noun edit

a cough and a spit

  1. (film, theater) A minor role.
    • 1992, Film Review, page 6:
      Ray Wise managed his back-to-black-hair role before joining Tim Robbins in Bob Roberts and James Marshall squeezed in his cough and a spit between Gladiator and joining the big boys (Nicholson, Cruise) in A Few Good Men []
    • 1998, Ken Whitmore, Alfred Bradley, The Final Twist: A Play, page 20:
      Everybody gargling madly and mugging up their lines as though Shakespeare himself was out front. Don't know why I bothered, I only had a cough and a spit.
  2. (UK, colloquial) A very short distance.
    • 2009, David Fiddimore, The Forgotten War, page 5:
      [] a Lancaster squadron at Bawne, west of Cambridge — it sits a cough and a spit from the Bedfordshire border.
    • 2013, Russell Cruse, The Rothko Room, page 258:
      [] Stockwell, a cough and a spit from Vauxhall Cross.