Cameron takes the reins
Conservative Party leader David Cameron completed a tortuous journey to become Britain's prime minister, and essentially clinched a fragile power-sharing deal with the country's No. 3 political party.
Losing someone you love is a torturous experience.
a piece/slice of the action INFORMAL
involvement in something successful that someone else has started:
Now research has proved that the drug is effective everyone wants a slice of the action.
A piece of the action
MeaningA share in an activity, or in its profits.
Origin
In the early 1600s, the Dutch came upon an interesting trading innovation - the company. Until then, the spice trade had been profitable but small scale, with spices being brought back from 'the Indies' (broadly what we now call Asia) along the tortuous Spice Road on pack horses. The high price of spices encouraged entrepreneurs to build ships to bring the spices back in larger quantities. There was big money to be made, but the large capital cost of building a fleet and the threat of loss from pirates made it too risky a venture for an individual investor; so, in 1602, they formed a company - the Dutch East India Company.
The term 'action', which continued to be used in that context well into the 19th century, was first recorded in English in John Evelyn's Diary, published between 1641 and 1706:
"African Actions fell to £30, and the India to £80."'A piece of the action' is certainly a 20th century American phrase. Despite its 1930s mobster overtones, the first use of it that I can find is in the 1957 film Monkey on My Back:
"You want a piece of my action, Sam?"The 'action' in the phrase means 'a share in an activity; an opportunity'. It is doubtful that whoever coined it in 1950s America knew the history of the Dutch East Indies Company but, knowingly or not, it was the Dutch 'acties' that were the source of that meaning of 'action'.
torturous
Pronunciation: /ˈtɔːtʃ(ə)rəs/
Definition of torturous
adjective
Origin:
late 15th century: from Anglo-Norman French, from torture 'torture'tor·tu·ous (tôr'chū-əs)
- Having or marked by repeated turns or bends; winding or twisting: a tortuous road through the mountains.
- Not straightforward; circuitous; devious: a tortuous plot; tortuous reasoning.
- Highly involved; complex: tortuous legal procedures.
[Middle English, from Anglo-Norman, from Latin tortuōsus, from tortus, a twisting, from past participle of torquēre, to twist.]
1 〈道・流れなどが〉曲がりくねった, ねじれた.
2 〈文章・発言などが〉長くて複雑な;率直でない, 回りくどい.
3 〈手段・政策などが〉不正な, よこしまな.tortuousness tor'tu·ous·ness n.
USAGE NOTE Although tortuous and torturous both come from the Latin word torquēre, "to twist," their primary meanings are distinct. Tortuous means "twisting" (a tortuous road) or by extension "complex" or "devious." Torturous refers primarily to torture and the pain associated with it. However, torturous also can be used in the sense of "twisted" or "strained," and tortured is an even stronger synonym: tortured reasoning.
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