legend in one's own lunchtime
English
Etymology
A playful variation of legend in one's own lifetime.
Pronunciation
Audio (General Australian): (file)
Noun
- (idiomatic, often ironic) One whose fame is insignificant, fleeting or imaginary.
- 2003, Clive Maxfield, Bebop to the Boolean Boogie, →ISBN, page 1:
- A legend in his own lunchtime, Bulwer-Lytton became renowned for penning exceptionally bad prose...
- 2008 May 19, Media Monkey, “Media Diary from the Observer”, in The Guardian, UK, retrieved 15 June 2014:
- At the company's end-of-season party last week, East Sr, a legend in his own lunchtime, grabbed the mic from the house band and regaled guests—including Setanta pundits Steve McManaman and Les Ferdinand—with a Beatles medley.
- 2012, Jeff Connor, Field of Fire[1], →ISBN:
- By way of a change, the Star assistant editor, another legend in his own lunchtime, would regularly fall asleep during the morning conference and we would simply tiptoe past him and leave him to it.