Share This Episode
Our American Stories Lee Habeeb Logo

"In a Nutshell" & "In the Doghouse" and the Wonderful Origins of Everyday Expressions

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb
The Truth Network Radio
March 12, 2024 3:03 am

"In a Nutshell" & "In the Doghouse" and the Wonderful Origins of Everyday Expressions

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb

On-Demand Podcasts NEW!

This broadcaster has 1974 podcast archives available on-demand.

Broadcaster's Links

Keep up-to-date with this broadcaster on social media and their website.


March 12, 2024 3:03 am

On this episode of Our American Stories, Andrew Thompson shares another slice of his guide to understanding the baffling mini-mysteries of the English language. The book is Hair of the Dog to Paint the Town Red: The Wonderful Origins of Everyday Expressions and Fun Phrases.

Support the show (https://www.ouramericanstories.com/donate)

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE

From football playoffs to basketball madness, TCL Roku TVs are the best way to stream your favorite live sports. With all the biggest sports channels, a sports zone with all available games in one place and apps like iHeartRadio with sports podcasts such as The Herd with Colin Cowherd.

Cheering on your favorite team has never been easier. A big screen TCL Roku TV offers premium picture and sound quality so you'll feel like you're right in the action. Find the perfect TCL Roku TV for you today at go.tcl.com slash TCL Roku TV. Welcome to 500 Greatest Songs, a podcast based on Rolling Stone's hugely popular, influential, and sometimes controversial list.

I'm Brittany Spanos and I'm Rob Sheffield. We're here to shed light on the greatest songs ever made and discover what makes them so great. From classics like Fleetwood Mac's Dreams to the Ronettes Be My Baby and modern day classics like The Killer's Mr. Brightside.

Listen to Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs starting on March 13th on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Are you looking to step up to a 4K Smart TV? One that gives you unparalleled clarity and picture resolution? Then we've got good news for you because the Vizio 65 inch V-Series 4K Smart TV is now just $348. With all your favorite apps built in, you can stream straight out of the box.

You can even sing along to all your favorite music and radio on the iHeart Radio app. Looking for a smaller or bigger screen? Vizio offers unbeatable prices on all V-Series 4K Smart TVs.

Head to Walmart.com today and score the 4K TV you've been waiting for. And up next, we continue with our recurring series about the curious origins of everyday sayings. Here to join us again is Andrew Thompson as he continues to share another slice from his ultimate guide to understanding these many mysteries of the English language. In a nutshell means concisely or in a few words.

You might say to someone, just tell me in a nutshell. And it's said to originate from the ancient story described in 17 AD by the Roman scholar Pliny the Elder. The story goes that the philosopher Cicero witnessed a copy of Homer's epic poem the Iliad written onto a piece of parchment and enclosed into the shell of a walnut.

Obviously this is impossible but it is believed that important documents were folded and inserted into walnut shells and bound so that they were waterproof and could be taken long distances without damaging them. Shakespeare referred to the expression in his 1603 play Hamlet and that immortalized the expression. In a shambles means a state of complete disorder or ruin and it derives from the open-air meat sellers of medieval times. The word shambles derives from the old English word meaning footstool which came from the Latin word meaning small bench. Most towns at that time in England had streets designated to a single type of vendor. There were streets for grocers, streets for bread sellers, butchers who all offered their wares from street-side workbenches. These streets were known as shambles but it was the butchers that became particularly associated with the term. As they were supplied directly by the slaughterhouses the meat shambles were renowned for being a complete mess of blood and offcuts.

By the 1400s the word shambles had become synonymous with general mess and disorder and the town of York in England to this day has a street called shambles. In cold blood means deliberately and without emotion is often related to murders. For example he murdered the man in cold blood. It's an expression that dates from the early 18th century and began with the belief that a person's blood heated up when an act of great emotional passion was committed. This was based on the reddening of the face and the feeling of heat that a person experienced.

It was thought that when one could carry out a violent crime without excitement or emotional involvement the person was acting in cold blood. The term was first used in the English publication The Spectator in 1711. To say something is in the bag means a successful outcome is absolutely certain and while there are different theories on the origins of the phrase including those relating to baseball and hunting the early days of the British Parliament is the likely birthplace. On the back of the Speaker's chair in Parliament hung a velvet bag and all successful petitions that were brought before the House of Commons would be placed in that bag.

Because it was known that all such petitions had been successful they became known as in the bag. If you say to someone I'm in the doghouse it usually means you're disgraced and out of favour usually said by a husband or wife. And in the doghouse is a phrase that has literary origins it derives from J.M. Barrie's 1904 book Peter Pan. Mr Darling the children's father in the book is particularly unpleasant to Nana the family dog.

His children then fly off with Peter Pan and as a self-imposed punishment for his behaviour he goes out to live in the doghouse until the children return from Neverland. Peter Pan was obviously a very popular book and as a result the expression quickly came into widespread usage. If you say in the doldrums or you're feeling in the doldrums it means to feel unmotivated or depressed and it relates to a region by that name which is located slightly north of the equator between two belts of wind. Sailors use the term because winds there met and neutralised each other which resulted in ships becoming stranded and sitting around idly virtually unable to sail. Many assume that the expression comes from the name of the region but it's actually that the region came to be named because of its nature.

Doldrum comes from the old English word dole meaning dull and that led on to the word doldrum and the phrase and the phrase was then used in the figurative sense by the early 19th century. In the groove is an expression which means to function perfectly or with little effort and it stems from the early vinyl record days. Records are made with a number of grooves cut into the material where the music is recorded. The record is played by a stylus or needle which must sit neatly in the groove to ensure good sound quality. If a stylus is worn making its tip too wide it will not sit in the groove and the sound will become distorted.

Equally if the record is scratched the stylus may slip out of the groove and the record won't play. The phrase took on its idiomatic qualities with the arrival of jazz in the 1920s. The free-spirited nature of jazz bands and the way they played with each other led people to describe them as in the groove. In the limelight means at the centre of attention. You may say John loves being in the limelight and this is one of the very first phrases I ever learnt. It has its origins in the theatre. When calcium oxide more commonly known as lime is heated it produces an intense white light and this process was first used to effect by a man named Thomas Drummond in the 1820s. He was a Scottish army engineer who used heated lime as an aid in map making because of the bright light was visible at a distance.

The technique was then adopted in theatres to illuminate the stage and was first used in Covent Garden in London in 1837. The actors who were the centre of attention on the stage were said to be standing in the limelight and that saying now applies to anyone who's the focus of attention. If you say something is in the offing you mean it is likely to happen soon or is imminent and it's a nautical expression originating in the early 1600s that came into widespread usage by the late 1700s. The offing is that part of the sea that is visible from or off the shore, the area between the shore and the horizon.

In other words a ship that was in the offing was within sight. And a special thanks to Greg Hengler for the production on the piece and a special thanks to Andrew Thompson, hair of the dog to paint the town red, the curious origins of everyday sayings and fun phrases go to amazon.com or any of the usual suspects. The story of the English language or at least its curious sayings and phrases here on Our American Stories. Folks if you love the great American stories we tell and love America like we do. We're asking you to become a part of the Our American Stories family. If you agree that America is a good and great country please make a donation.

A monthly gift of $17.76 is fast becoming a favorite option for supporters. Go to our American stories.com now and go to the donate button and help us keep the great American stories coming. That's our American stories.com.

Hey hey it's Malcolm Gladwell host of Revisionist History. eBay Motors is here for the ride. Your elbow grease fresh installs and a whole lot of love transformed 100,000 miles and a body full of rust into a drive entirely its own. Brake kits, LED headlights, whatever you need eBay Motors has it. And with eBay Guaranteed Fit it's guaranteed to fit your ride the first time every time or your money back. Plus at these prices you're burning rubber not cash. Keep your ride or die alive at eBay Motors dot com.

Eligible items only exclusions apply. From football playoffs to basketball madness TCL Roku TVs are the best way to stream your favorite live sports with all the biggest sports channels. A sports zone with all available games in one place and apps like iHeartRadio with sports podcasts such as The Herd with Colin Cowherd. Cheering on your favorite team has never been easier. A big screen TCL Roku TV offers premium picture and sound quality so you'll feel like you're right in the action.

Find the perfect TCL Roku TV for you today at go dot TCL dot com slash TCL Roku TV. Welcome to 500 Greatest Songs a podcast based on Rolling Stone's hugely popular influential and sometimes controversial list. I'm Brittany Spanos and I'm Rob Sheffield. We're here to shed light on the greatest songs ever made and discover what makes them so great. From classics like Fleetwood Mac's Dreams to the Ronettes Be My Baby and modern day classics like The Killers Mr. Right Side. Listen to Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs starting on March 13th on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Whisper: medium.en / 2024-03-12 04:35:39 / 2024-03-12 04:40:08 / 4

Get The Truth Mobile App and Listen to your Favorite Station Anytime