twinkle in one's father's eye

English edit

Pronunciation edit

  • (file)

Noun edit

twinkle in one's father's eye (plural twinkles in their fathers' eyes)

  1. (idiomatic, colloquial, humorous) A notional look of anticipation or hope (either for sex or a child) in one's father's eyes at or around the time of one's conception.
    • 1975, Terry Blake, The Fig Tree, Aim Publishing (1975), page 26:
      Kimberly handed him a whisky and said: "So's that, my boy. Forty-eight-year-old Glenlivet. This was a connoisseur's drop before you were a twinkle in your father's eye."
    • 1992, Martina Cole, Dangerous Lady[1], Headline Publishing, published 2008, →ISBN:
      'Don't you take the piss out of me, sonny. I was doing this job when you were just a drunken twinkle in your father's eye!'
    • 2010, Max Overton, Jim Darley, Sequestered[2], Sequestered Books, →ISBN:
      “Thirty years ago you would not even have been a twinkle in your father's eye.”
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:twinkle in one's father's eye.

Usage notes edit

Used to refer to a person when discussing things which existed at or before the time that person was conceived.

Synonyms edit