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Fine tooth/toothed comb

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c00ky83 | 20:19 Thu 31st Mar 2005 | Phrases & Sayings
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You know people say they'll go through something with a "fine-toothed comb", meaning to examine it thoroughly.  I presume this is the correct phrase?  So many people, even on TV, say "fine tooth-comb".  What the hell is a "tooth-comb"?

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Well, you know how you sometimes find a hair in your mouth...
The earliest recorded version of this - dating back to the early 19th century - was in the form 'fine-tooth comb' rather than 'toothed'. It also sometimes appeared with a double hyphen, as 'fine-tooth-comb'. I can't honestly say I've ever heard anyone say it in the way you suggest...ie minus the hyphen between 'fine' and 'tooth'. It's an interesting concept, though...a tooth-comb!
It's also known as a nit comb.
Teeth are so close together that the nits (eggs of head lice) can be combed out.
Ugh.
The little "sticks" that a comb are made of are called teeth and there are different space measurements in different combs.  On a botle of conditioner it sometimes says to use a "wide tooth comb" -- meaning the conditioner will cover more surface area on your head.  With a fine toothed comb, you can look at smaller areas more specifically -- as when you are looking for lice.  Something like that....

SillyMoo is spot on. After treatment for head lice which kills the lice but not the nits a fine toothed comb will remove the nits from the hair & so prevent reinfestation when the nits hatch out. I thought this condition had died out long ago but obviously they are still around.

Spinner.

Forgot to add that in the "fine" refers to the space between the "teeth."  They are closer.
It might make more sense if you think of it as a
fine-hyphen-tooth space comb rather than a
fine space tooth-hyphen-comb.
THANK YOU BERNARDO!!!  I'm having a bit of jumble mouth today and was having trouble communicating my answer.  Thanks again!  :)

A tooth comb is just a comb (with teeth) a finer tooth-comb would be a nit-comb which also has teeth.

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You've got me all-mixed-up with my hy-phens now
The thingeys are closer together in a fine tooth comb
Surely Peter Pedant, the thingeys are closer together in a fine-thingey comb...
Okay, okay. But what other sorts of combs are there? I thought they all had teeth (finely spaced or widely spaced) and if they didn't have teeth they wouldn't work as a comb...

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