ChatterBank0 min ago
Where did the word fuss pot derive from ?
8 Answers
Anyone have any idea where or why the term 'fuss pot' comes from? My husband has this guy at work who is a wealth of information and he would like to answer this ! I think its a male ego thing!!!!!
thanks
Louise
thanks
Louise
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.A synonym for yor word/phrase is fussbudget and derives thusly: "From fuss + budget, from Middle English, from Old French bougette,diminutive of bouge (bag), from Latin bulga (bag). Ultimately from Indo-European root bhelgh- (to swell) that is also the source of bulge, bellows, billow, belly, and bolster." (Source:VisualThesaurus)
In addition the source indicates "...A synonym of this word is fusspot. Usually we dislike fusspots and fussbudgets but sometimes we wish there were fussbudgets among our elected leaders who cared enough to fuss about the budget of this country.
The word budget is a marvelous example of how the language goes around. French bougette (little bag) came to English, developed a new sense: budget (a financial estimate), and then went back to French in its new
avatar. Most living languages are mongrels and that's what makes them richer. Why fuss about keeping them "pure"?
Other sources, by the way, seem to indicate a New England area of the U.S. genesis for the words...
In addition the source indicates "...A synonym of this word is fusspot. Usually we dislike fusspots and fussbudgets but sometimes we wish there were fussbudgets among our elected leaders who cared enough to fuss about the budget of this country.
The word budget is a marvelous example of how the language goes around. French bougette (little bag) came to English, developed a new sense: budget (a financial estimate), and then went back to French in its new
avatar. Most living languages are mongrels and that's what makes them richer. Why fuss about keeping them "pure"?
Other sources, by the way, seem to indicate a New England area of the U.S. genesis for the words...
Yes saintjohnny - Fusspot was used when I was a child, growing up in Lincolsnhire, but a Cockney friend also uses it. It's said that a fusspot, was an Aboriginal utensil for catching the oil of emus as they were cooked. Perhaps that's connected to the esxpression of "flaffing about" - whittling, worrying, waving of arms or wings?
Collins English Dictionary gives 'fusspot... also called (US) 'fuss-budget ' . So, as suspected, fuss-budget is American.
Neither Collins nor the Oxford English Dictionary deigns to explain the 'pot' part. The OED does give,inter alia, 'an important person' and 'a large sum of money; the betting pool in poker' . An important person might fuss and gamblers might fuss over the pool but a clue may be in the American version. It has a pleasing domesticity about it, a homely quality.The American fuss-budget must be fussing over expenditure or finances. In the English kitchen, such a person might fuss over the cooking pot, perhaps forgetting, in that fussing, that a watched pot never boils, the fusspot !. :)
Neither Collins nor the Oxford English Dictionary deigns to explain the 'pot' part. The OED does give,inter alia, 'an important person' and 'a large sum of money; the betting pool in poker' . An important person might fuss and gamblers might fuss over the pool but a clue may be in the American version. It has a pleasing domesticity about it, a homely quality.The American fuss-budget must be fussing over expenditure or finances. In the English kitchen, such a person might fuss over the cooking pot, perhaps forgetting, in that fussing, that a watched pot never boils, the fusspot !. :)
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