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Wetting the baby's head
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does anyone know where the saying comes from & why it is linked to going out and having a drink to celebrate the birth? I think its to do with the water on the head at a christening etc. but not sure
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Since the 1600s, the verb 'to wet' has meant to celebrate by drinking. A soldier, for example, would ‘wet his commission'...ie celebrate his being promoted to officer rank by having drinks with colleagues. The earliest use of 'wet the baby's head', as such, dates only to the 19th century.
When a baby is baptised in church, its head is literally 'wetted' by the priest using water from the baptismal font, so the custom of fathers inviting friends to 'wet the baby's head' is just a sort of non-religious baptism-like celebration.
When a baby is baptised in church, its head is literally 'wetted' by the priest using water from the baptismal font, so the custom of fathers inviting friends to 'wet the baby's head' is just a sort of non-religious baptism-like celebration.
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