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Silly, chilly... and very tricky

00:00 Sun 17th Mar 2002 |

Four questions keep on coming up in these pages. One's a bit silly, another could be chilly and the last two are decidedly tricky.

Let's take the silly one out of the way first.

Q. What is 'pig' Latin
A. There's a full article on this elsewhere in the Answerbank. But, briefly, it's a set of rules for constructing a kind of schoolboy code which apes one perceived characteristic of the Latin language (perceived by people who've just started learning it, that is).

So, having got that off our chests, on to the chilly one...

Q. What is 'going commando'
A. Ask Mel Gibson! It refers to the Braveheart-style fashion statement which requires gentlemen to eschew the wearing of undergarments beneath their trousers/shorts/kilts.

But we're pretty sure Mel got the idea from that other well-know historical commentator, Sid James, in a somewhat earlier movie: Carry on Up The Khyber!

OK, now we're on a roll. Let's tackle a tricky one...

Q. Is the Paul Harvey riddle just a trick question
A.
In a word, yes. But as these things go, it's quite a thought-provoking one.

The riddle, as almost everyone user of the internet probably knows by now, is:

What is greater than God,
More evil than the devil;
The poor have it, the rich need it -
But if you eat it, you die

And the answer is 'nothing'. Neat, huh

And finally...

Q. What's the origin of 'The whole nine yards'.

A. Pass. That's the honest answer.

OK, we all know it's the title of a Bruce Willis movie - but that's no reason to avoid the question. In truth, though, there are a lot of plausible answers.

The meaning most often attributed to it is 'to give it all you have got', and the majority view seems to be that it's a mutation of an olde English expression 'to then eyne', meaning 'dressed to the eyes'. This was gradually corrupted into 'the neyne', then to 'the nine' and...

In the US, it's often held to have something to do with a winning run in baseball. But that's ten yards - so another American strand has it that it's to do with the length of machine-gun belts used by the American military.

Nautical types like to believe it's to do with rigging all the spars on a three-masted vessel. Which has a certain charm - and the advantage of being almost totally unproveable...

Do you have a question about Phrases & Sayings?