ChatterBank0 min ago
Dot and Carry
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The Gunga Din reference made me wonder where the phrase 'dot and carry' comes from. I know someone who uses it to signify someone or something that is lame or limping, i.e. they are going 'dot and carry'.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.In the 1700s, 'dot and carry' was a schoolboy phrase used to describe an arithmetical process as in 'dot and carry one'. In adding, for example, the 'dot' part presumably meant one process had been completed...ie column one added up to 12, say, so 2 was written down... and the 'carry one' meant that the 10 (in the form of '1') had to be carried over to column 2.
The phrase 'dot and carry one' was even a nickname applied to maths teachers back then!
The phrase 'dot and carry one' was even a nickname applied to maths teachers back then!
As I recall, I was taught to put down a dot for each 10 I was carrying over - so if the first column added up to 32 I would write down 2 and put three small dots in the next column to remind me to add on 3 more to it. But I don't know if this was connected to the Long John Silver sort of dotting and carrying at all.