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Friday, November 18, 2005

** Phrase origins : Don't look a gift horse in the mouth



Meaning:

Don't be ungrateful when you receive a gift.

Origin:

This comes into the category of phrases known as proverbs. That is, 'short and expressive sayings, in common use, which are recognised as conveying some accepted truth or useful advice'.

As horses age their teeth begin to project further forward each year and so the age can be estimated by checking how prominent the teeth are. This incidentally is also the source of another teeth/age related phrase - long in the tooth.

The advice given in the 'don't look...' proverb is: when given a present, be grateful for your good fortune and don't look for more by examining it to assess its value.

As with most proverbs the origin is ancient and unknown. We have some clues with this one however. The phrase was originally "don't look a given horse in the mouth" and first appears in print in 1546 in 'The Proverbs of John Heywood', where he gives it as:

"No man ought to looke a geuen hors in the mouth."

Heywood is an interesting character in the development of English. He was employed at the courts of Henry VIII and Mary I as a singer, musician, and playwright. His Proverbs is a comprehensive collection of those known at the time and includes many that are still with us:

- Many hands make light work.
- Rome wasn't built in a day.
- A good beginning makes a good ending.

and so on. These were expressed in the literary language of the day, as in "would yee both eat your cake, and have your cake?", but the modern versions are their obvious ancestors.

It would be nice to be able to attribute these to Heywood himself, but it's more likely that he collected them from common parlance. He can certainly be given the credit for introducing many proverbs to a wide and continuing audience though and that includes one that Shakespeare later borrowed - "All's well that ends well". Posted by Picasa

2 Comments:

Blogger dazzlingdimwit said...

Nice, I like informative bits like that, even if a razzly dazzly dimwith like me already knew half of it :p.
Now if the trojans had only looked their gift horse in the mouth...

6:07 AM  
Blogger aria said...

Hahahhaahh!!!
:P

3:27 PM  

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