Take surnames such as Weller, which Charles Dickens gave to two of his characters. That name had its origin in the Middle Ages in the salt industry. From Roman times, on the east coast of England, salt was produced by boiling the brine in lead pans which had been rinsed from sand. Brine contains six different salts which crystalize out at different rates and only the third, sodium chloride, was used for preservation and flavouring. The weller’s job was to collect that particular salt at precisely the right time without it becoming contaminated by the others. Behind that single name, Weller, lies the whole history of a medieval industry on which the entire population depended for its survival over winter.
Even modern-sounding
words can have a surprising ancient origin. While researching one of my recent
novels, I discovered that phrases such a boozing,
fed-up, under the thumb, and old codger are all in fact medieval falconry
terms.
Idioms also contain
miniature histories. When I first went to work in Nigeria I heard someone say
of a man – ‘he went to Lafia and didn’t
buy yams.’ I thought this was some comment on his personal shopping habits,
until I heard it used about other people. They meant ‘the man is an idiot’. This
idiom comes from the fact that the town of Lafia had been an important trading
centre since the 16th century and was famed for holding yam markets
all year round instead of just seasonally. Yam was a stable food, so you can
imagine what a man’s wife would have called her husband if he’d made the long, arduous
journey to Lafia and forgotten to buy the most important thing she’d sent him
for.
I was delighted this
week to discover a new book by Philip Gooden and Peter Lewis Idiomantics – The weird and Wonderful world of Popular Phrases, which tells the intriguing stories behind many familiar
sayings from around the world. Take the phrase Hobson’s choice, according to the book, it derives from a Thomas
Hobson who, in the 16th Century, hired out horses in Cambridge.
Fearing that his customers would always choose the fittest animal and would
quickly ruin the best horses, he insisted that the customer always took the
next horse in line nearest the stable door.
Another example is Eat crow, which does not, as you might
imagine, refer to a dish made from birds, but from the 17th century
word for an animal’s intestines, which in turn links to a dish made of deer
intestines known as an umble pie, a poor man’s supper.
There are so many gems
in this book. I had no idea, for example, that Slush fund or Taken aback
are both old nautical terms, or Sweet Fanny
Adams has its origins in a gruesome murder. Boondoggle – a wonderful American word – apparently comes from the world
of cowboys and behind the German expression Potemkinsche
Dorfer – Potemkin Villages (Castles
in the Air) lies a strange tale involving Catherine the Great of Russia.
I love to think that
all of us are ‘speaking history’ every day whether we are ‘putting a flea in someone’s ear’ or just ‘soldiering on’, even if we don’t always know the fascinating stories
which lie behind those seemingly ordinary words and phrases. But I’d better
stop playing the giddy kipper now and
retire for my forty winks. By the way
can anyone tell me why it’s forty?
(Oh, and just in case you were
wondering – the original expression giddy
little kipper (or whelk) was a
cockney term of approval dating from around 1860/1880 to describe someone who looked
really fine when dressed up in their best clothes for a night out in the local
tavern or some special occasion like a wedding. But by the Second World War it
had transformed into the expression playing
the giddy kipper which had spread outside London, and meant to show off, mess around or make a show of yourself and was definitely
not to be encouraged.)
9 comments:
Fabulous! I love knowing where phrases come from. In my research of 1700s smuggling, I came across a few such as 'the coast is clear' which meant the revenue men weren't in sight.
(And er - staple, rather than stable? 4th para)
Love this! Just my cup of tea, as they say. Thank you, Karen.
Thank you - really enjoyed this - and I've ordered the book!
Great post, Karen!
I love words and their orgins as well. Thanks for the post.
Ha! Shall play the giddy kipper today and just not care!
Delightful post & fascinating facts. Karen. Welcome & thank you.
I knew about Sweet Fanny Adams (shudder!) but the origins of those other phrases that sound so modern were a surprise. I've been amazed at how modern some 17thC slang sounds. One woman said of an adversary, "He was completely out of order." She meant unruly, lost control - not quite the modern meaning. Fascinating post, Karen - thank you!
Terrific post, Karen...
And now, of course, I have to order the book. Thanks Karen!
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