Quizzes & Puzzles19 mins ago
Bucket or Pail?
What's the difference between a bucket & a pail please?
(My parents always called it a pail, but I've always called it a bucket).
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I think it might be a generation thing. 'Pail' is older I think, as Jack and Jill fetched a pail of water, and there were milk pails. You wouldn't say 'milk bucket'. My nan was from East Anglia, then a very rural region, and she always said 'pail'. It became an 'uncool' word almost by a common consent and people switched to 'bucket' without knowing why. I wonder whether 'bucket' was regional and the word 'won out'.
I wonder, too, whether manufacturing/materials made a difference earlier on, but that difference has been lost in the mists of time.
'Pail' comes ultimately from the Latin 'patella', meaning a small dish...as in the medical word for a kneecap...first appearing in English around 1000 AD as 'p�gel' = a measure of wine. It also has connections with Old French 'paelle', meaning a pan or bath.
'Bucket' probably comes from Old French 'buket', meaning a wash-tub or milk-pail, and found its way into English around 1300 AD.
Time has simply blended the meanings.
lifted from a website:
Many of you who fell asleep during your language classes might think that the pa in paella might mean "pan," but you would be wrong; it actually means, "to drink." Derived from the Latin term pa (which originally comes from the Sanskrit language), paterna, patina, and patella all mean "a chalice or a culinary utensil used for frying." Patina and patella eventually became known as a pan or "paella" during Roman times.
When the Romans originally introduced the paella pan to Spain, it had a concave bottom. It has since evolved into a round, flat-bottomed pan which exposes the entire base to the heat.
OK, but none of that explains why smudge's parents called the object a 'pail' and smudge says 'bucket'. I still say that in modern usage it became more acceptable to call the object 'bucket' from about the 1950s. 'Pail' seemed so old-fashioned, belonging with 'mangle' and 'copper'. Country people, particularly, had called the same object 'pail' from the turn of the century, maybe before, perhaps?
There also is the possibility that 'pail' was the ascendant word for a time, with 'bucket' seemingly old-fashioned, in whatever age that was! Back and forth, over the ages. Perhaps the object had a name which was cast aside in favour of the Latin 'new' word!
Usage changes...simple as that. For example, I myself can recall a time when I would have been quite happy to tell friends that I had been the centre of attention at a 'gay' party the night before. I'd need to think twice about saying any such thing nowadays!
In regards to units of measure, a pail or bucket is not a unit of measure--pail or buckets can be had in one, two, three....gallons, liters, etc. The only difference is which end the bottom is on --the small end (bucket) or the large end (pail). Now it's settled.
Jack
In regards to units of measure, a pail or bucket is not a unit of measure--pail or buckets can be had in one, two, three....gallons, liters, etc. The only difference is which end the bottom is on --the small end (bucket) or the large end (pail). Now it's settled.
Jack