Weasel Words

Some time back there was some discussion about the origins of the phrase, ‘the penny dropped’. Yesterday I was directed to The Phrase Finder. What a find!

The following phrases were chosen at random from the wealth of material:

Dogs Breakfast – a mess or muddle.
Origin: This is a 20th century phrase. Eric Partridge, in the 1937 edition of his ‘Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English’ lists it as “a mess: low Glasgow”.

Rack your brains – to strain mentally to recall or to understand something
Origin: The rack was a mediaeval torture device. The crude but, one presumes, effective racks often tore the victim’s limbs from their bodies. It isn’t surprising that ‘rack’ was adopted as a verb meaning to cause pain and anguish. Shakespeare was one of many authors who used this. For example, from Twelfth Night, 1601:

“How haue the houres rack’d, and tortur’d me, Since I haue lost thee?”

Weasel words – Ambiguous or quibbling speech.
Origin: Stewart Chaplin’s story Stained glass political platform, 1900, contains this line:

“Why, weasel words are words that suck the life out of the words next to them, just as a weasel sucks the egg and leaves the shell.”

Thanks to Jonny of Do They Hurt for the link.

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2 thoughts on “Weasel Words”

  1. Glad to be of service! Hope you remembered to join their mailing list. I actually have a calendar on my desk which explains the origin of a different phrase every day – great fun. Today’s is ‘strike while the iron is hot’. You can probably work out where that came from!

  2. No, I hadn;t signed up for the mailing list. Might do that.

    Have you an example of a Weasel word by any chance?

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