14 Origins of Phrases You Probably Use Every Day but Had No Idea about
Have you ever walked into a tiny room and thought ‘I couldn’t swing a cat in here?’ Have you ever ‘rubbed someone up the wrong way?’ These are examples of phrases we use all the time, but do you know their origins? I love words. I love metaphors, words that come from foreign languages, I love how words shape our minds, how we use them to influence people, they’re just so powerful. Lately, I’ve been looking into the origins of phrases and have found some really interesting ones I thought I’d share with you. I hope you find them as fascinating as I did. A very small space This is a nautical term and derives from a ‘cat-o-nine-tails’, a whip used to punish sailors onboard ships. Sailors would usually receive punishment below decks. However, quarters were cramped, hence the saying, ‘no room to swing the cat‘. To irritate or annoy In America in the 16-century, slaves had many tasks to carry out. One was to rub the wooden floors of their master’s houses, first with a wet cloth, then with a dry one. If they went against the natural grain, it looked unsightly and annoyed the master. Cowardly behaviour You’ll never guess where this phrase originates from. It comes from bare-knuckle fighters in the 20-century and their bottle men. Each fighter had their own bottle man to provide them with water between rounds. Managers with poor fighters would instruct the bottle man to disappear. This would stop the fight. ‘Lost your bottle man’ was eventually shortened to ‘lost your bottle’. To relax In Parisian society, it was the done thing to have an elaborate hair-do.
These hairdos took hours to achieve so at the end of the evening it was a huge relief to let them down. To gain an advantage This phrase originates from the 15-century and comes from a game involving two or more people and a long stick.
The first person places their hand on the stick at the bottom, the next person places their hand just above and so on until the last person to reach the top of the stick wins.
They have the upper hand. A broad principle In the 17-century, an English judge ruled that British men could legally beat their wives with a stick, so long as the stick was less than the width of the husband’s thumb. To demand money by threats This is one of those phrases you’d never guess the origins unless perhaps you are Scottish. It originated in the Scottish Highlands in the 16-century. In those days, ‘mail’ was an old word which meant rent. Farmers paid rent in silver coins.
The rent was known as ‘white mail’. Certain clans started racketeering in the farming areas.
They threatened farmers with violence then offered them protection but only if they paid. Farmers called this extra payment ‘black-mail’. Rescue from an unwanted situation Before advances in modern medicine and technology, it was quite common for doctors to pronounce people dead.
The problem was, these people were not dead and some were being buried alive. Fear spread amongst towns and cities. Stories passed around of gravediggers hearing screams from below the ground at night. To combat the problem, a special coffin was made with a bell that could be rung from inside that would alert people above ground. Hence, ‘saved by the bell‘. Given the sack No, this phrase does not have its origins in the Whitehouse or anywhere near Donald Trump. It’s much older than that. It’s a mining term. A miner caught stealing would have his tools burned or ‘fired’. It meant he couldn’t work anywhere. It was so effective a punishment that other trades adopted the phrase. Lose your job Speaking of getting the sack, that’s another one of our phrases that has unusual origins. Today, getting the sack has unpleasant connotations, but in actual fact, in the past, it was a positive sign. Centuries ago, craftsmen and labourers would expect to work on a job for a few days or a week at most.
They would carry their tools in a sack, which the owner would stash for them for safekeeping.
The sacks were returned when the labourer finished the job.
They got their sack back. To reveal a secret This is another one of those phrases that you’ll never guess its origins in a million years. In ancient Greece, people voted in elections using beans. If they liked a candidate, they used a white bean. If they disapproved, they would place a black bean in the container. If these containers were knocked over, everyone could see how the voting was going.
Therefore, if someone ‘spilled the beans‘, the secret was out. Dying You might not use this phrase after you learn of its origins. In slaughterhouses, when cows are killed, a bucket is placed underneath it to catch the blood when it dies. Sometimes, the cow’s legs would kick the bucket when it died. Reveal a secret Back in medieval times, the marketplace was rife with tricksters and fraudsters. One such deception was the sale of suckling pigs. Once the pig was purchased, the hapless buyer would be distracted by the seller.
The pig would then be swapped for a cat and which was placed in the bag, ready for the customer.
The customer would only realise when he ‘let the cat out of the bag’. Lose your nerve German writer Fritz Reuter was the first person to use this phrase. Interestingly, Reuter uses the term in each of his books. In the first, ‘An Old Story of My Farming Days’, he uses it to describe a poker player to wants to leave the game with his winnings intact.
The poker player complains he has ‘cold feet’ and manages to leave without causing upset to the other players. In the other, ‘Seed-time and Harvest’, it involves a joke made by a shoemaker. Do you have any interesting phrases or words you’d like to share? Even better, do you know their origins? Let us know! R.
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