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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums"20 Surprising Origins Of Popular Sayings"
20 Surprising Origins Of Popular Sayingsby Adam Ellis at BuzzFeed
http://www.buzzfeed.com/adamellis/20-surprising-origins-of-popular-sayings
"SNIP............................
1. Let the cat out of the bag.
Meaning to reveal a secret, letting the cat out of the bag finds its roots in 18th-century street fraud. Suckling pigs were often sold in bags, and a popular scheme was to replace the pig with a cat and sell it to an unwitting victim.
2. Dont look a gift horse in the mouth.Horses gums recede with age, leading to longer teeth. A common way to inspect a horses worth is to check its mouth, hence the phrase. Receiving a horse as a gift and immediately inspecting its value was considered offensive, much like inquiring about the worth of a present today is rude.
3. Youre pulling my leg.
Meaning to tease someone or jokingly lie to them, pulling ones leg actually has sinister origins, rooted in the criminal world of the 18th century. Street thieves would literally pull victims down by their leg in order to more easily rob them.
4. Eating crow.
To eat crow means to admit fault or be proved wrong after taking a strong position. The Bible lists crow as unfit for eating, and along with buzzards and rats, it was actually illegal to eat crow in the Middle Ages. As such, it was notably humiliating to consume.
...........................SNIP"
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"20 Surprising Origins Of Popular Sayings" (Original Post)
applegrove
Oct 2013
OP
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(19,768 posts)1. I've always wondered about the "cat out of the bag" one.
The actual origin is a lot better than the one I imagined.
Killer link, thanks.
applegrove
(118,677 posts)2. I go to buzzfeed about once a week these days. Always some
new fact thread. Which I love.
Skip Intro
(19,768 posts)3. I'm going to have to make it part of my rounds.
Thanks.