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Boiled eggs and Soldiers
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I was amazed to find that my American son-in-law had never heard of boiled eggs and soldiers, but I was unable to answer his query as to where the soldier part came from. I muttered vaguely about Humpty Dumpty (he'd not heard that either). Any information would be helpful to keep our Brit. end up many thanks.
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No best answer has yet been selected by megfitz. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.What really amazed me was that the earliest recorded use of the word in this sense, according to the Oxford English Dictionary, dates back only to 1966.
If you have any verifiable written evidence of its having been used earlier, I'm sure the editorial team at the OED would be delighted to hear from you. (It's no good just 'claiming' you and yours were saying it in 1945!)
If you have any verifiable written evidence of its having been used earlier, I'm sure the editorial team at the OED would be delighted to hear from you. (It's no good just 'claiming' you and yours were saying it in 1945!)
As I said, H and Kiki, I was as surprised as you were. However, the OED does always make an effort to find the earliest verifiable use of words, so - in the absence of evidence to the contrary - I take their word for such things.
You may well have seen a TV series a year or two back called 'Balderdash and Piffle', featuring Victoria Coren. She researched such things and did manage to persuade the scholars at the OED to accept some of her findings. So, their minds are far from closed to new proof, which had to be in writing and pretty uncontestable.
Over to you to seek out your forebears' diaries or whatever!
You may well have seen a TV series a year or two back called 'Balderdash and Piffle', featuring Victoria Coren. She researched such things and did manage to persuade the scholars at the OED to accept some of her findings. So, their minds are far from closed to new proof, which had to be in writing and pretty uncontestable.
Over to you to seek out your forebears' diaries or whatever!
It is precisely because of faulty childhood memories that the OED demands evidence in writing from a 'document' the age of which is verifiable. So, if anyone has a 1927 diary belonging to Granny with an entry reading, "Had boiled eggs and soldiers for breakfast this morning" I'm sure the editors would gladly consider it at least.
I am not at all convinced by any supposed Humpty Dumpty connection rather than the simple 'appearance' - rigidly straight, upright (when being dipped) and the different brown/yellow colours resembling a uniform - of a military man.
I am not at all convinced by any supposed Humpty Dumpty connection rather than the simple 'appearance' - rigidly straight, upright (when being dipped) and the different brown/yellow colours resembling a uniform - of a military man.
Megfitz, I notice Mike has not come back on this, so click http:// www.phr ases.or ...d/9/ message s/322.h tml for some more on Humpty Dumpty.