ChatterBank2 mins ago
egg on
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where did the expression egg on come from?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Phrase Finder interestingly tells us: The 'egg' of 'egg on' is a straightforward variant of 'edge', so to 'egg someone on' is to edge them forward. Egg and edge have the look and feel of Viking words and this first impressions turns out to be correct, as they both derive from the Old Norse 'eddja'. Egg has been used as a verb in English since around the 13th century and appears in print in the trinity College Homer, in the form of 'eggede', circa 1200.
To 'egg on' appears later. It is used in Thomas Drant's translation of Horace - Horace his arte of poetrie, pistles and satyrs englished, 1566:
"Ile egge them on to speake some thyng, whiche spoken may repent them."
To 'egg on' appears later. It is used in Thomas Drant's translation of Horace - Horace his arte of poetrie, pistles and satyrs englished, 1566:
"Ile egge them on to speake some thyng, whiche spoken may repent them."