• Ten Phrases that Originated in the Middle Ages

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    Ten Phrases that Originated in the Middle Ages

    Some of our most popular phrases have a long history, including some
    that go back to the Middle Ages. Here are 10 medieval phrases from the Dictionary of Idioms and their Origins.

    1. “The apple of one’s eye”
    In early medieval England the pupil of the eye was known as the apple
    (Old English æppel) since it was thought to be an apple-shaped solid.
    Since the delicate pupil of the eye is essential for vision, it is a
    part that is cherished and to be protected. Thus apple of the eye was
    used as a figure for a much-loved person or thing. Even King Alfred the
    Great used this phrase.

    2. “Baker’s dozen”
    This phrase arose from a piece of medieval legislation, the Assize of
    Bread and Ale of 1262. Bakers of the period had a reputation for selling underweight loaves, so legislation was put in place to make standardized weights. To make sure that they did not sell underweight bread, bakers
    started to give an extra piece of bread away with every loaf, and a
    thirteenth loaf with every dozen.

    3. “To curry favour”
    The phrase came from the Middle English words ‘curry favel’, which in
    Old French was ‘estriller fauvel’. It meant ‘to rub down or groom a chestnut horse. In Le Roman de Favuel, a 14th-century French romance, a chestnut horse representing hypocrisy and deceit is carefully combed
    down by other characters in order to win his favour and assistance. The popularity of the work led people to accuse those who tried to further
    their own ends by flattery to be currying favel. By the sixteenth
    century the phrase had changed slightly to currying favour.

    4. “To play devil’s advocate”
    Devil’s advocate is a translation of the Latin ‘advocatus diaboli’. This was the popular title given to the official appointed by the Roman
    Catholic church to argue against the proposed canonization of a saint by bringing up all that was unfavourable to the claim. The post, which was officially known as Promoter of the Faith (promotor fidei), seems to
    have been established by Pope Leo X in the early sixteenth century.

    5. “To throw down the gauntlet”
    The gauntlet was a piece of armour that knights wore to protect their
    forearms and hands. A gauntlet-wearing knight would challenge a fellow
    knight or enemy to a duel by throwing one of his gauntlets on the ground.

    6. “By hook or by crook”
    Records of this phase date back to the 14th century. One theory for its
    origin suggests that a medieval law about collecting firewood allowed
    peasants to take what they could only cut from dead trees by using their reaper’s bill-hook or a shepherd’s crook.

    7. “Hue and cry”
    This phrase dates back to 12th-century England. Hue comes from the Old
    French ‘huer’, which means to shout out. In the Middle Ages, if you saw
    a crime being committed, you were obliged to raise ‘hue’ and ‘cry’, that
    is to shout and make noise, to warn the rest of the community, so they
    could come to pursue and capture the criminal.

    8. “A nest egg”
    By the fourteenth century the phrase nest egg was used by peasants to
    explain why they left one egg in the nest when collecting them from hens
    – it would encourage the chickens to continue laying eggs in the same
    nest. By the seventeenth century this phrase now meant to set aside a
    sum of money for the future.

    9. “A red-letter day”
    During the fifteenth century it became customary to mark all feast days
    and saints’ days in red on the ecclesiastical calendar, while other days
    were in black.

    10. “To sink or swim”
    The phrase refers to the water ordeal, a medieval practice of judging
    whether a person was innocent or guilty by casting him or her into a
    lake. The belief was that water would not accept anyone who had rejected
    the water of baptism, so if the victim sunk they were innocent, but if
    they floated they were guilty. Chaucer used a similar phrase: “Ye rekke
    not whether I flete (float) or sink”.

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    There is also one phrase that was first thought of as medieval, but has
    more modern origins:

    “To pay through the nose”
    One theory has this phrase dating back to the early Middle Ages. The
    Vikings were said to have imposed heavy taxes on the people, and if one
    did not pay it they suffered the punishment of having their nose slit.
    However, this phrase was not used until the 17th century, which makes
    its medieval origins to be unlikely.

    You can read more about them, and hundreds of others, in Dictionary of
    Idioms and their Origins, by Linda and Roger Flavell. Click here to see
    the book on Amazon.com

    Top Image: Looking at an apple – British Library MS Royal 10 E IV f. 210v

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