by "Ildhund" <jnllb@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
May 26, 2008 at 12:17 AM
"Paul" <paulmathewmac@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
news:7fb88046-2200-401a-8353-45277fb7b0bc@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> I stumbled upon "on the spur of the moment" in wiktionary.com and
> found that the meaning given is "on very short notice". The
> example
> cited reinforces the meaning -"They kept their bags packed so they
> can
> leave on the spur of the moment".
> I thought the idiom referred to acting on impulse as in " I took
> that
> decision on the spur of the moment and have regretted it ever
> since".
My own view coincides with yours, but the OED (1989) allows for
both:
d. /on (or upon) the spur of the moment (or occasion, etc.)/,
without premeditation or deliberation; on a momentary impulse;
impromptu, suddenly, instantly.
--
Noel