Internet0 min ago
Wind up merchant
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I've just used this phrase on this site and know what it means (roughly), but where does it come from?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I would guess it comes from things you wind up and let go - a watch perhaps or kids' toys. You 'wind someone up' in similar fashion - do something that you know will get them started (eg making them angry) and then stand back and let them do it... and a merchant would just suggest (exaggeratedly) that they wind people up all the time for a living...
One meaning of 'merchant' has been just a 'chap' since the 1500s, as in 'speed merchant'...ie a man who likes to drive fast. It doesn't really have much to do with selling anything in this usage.
'Wind up' in the sense used here...ie provoking someone into a misunderstanding as a practical joke...is much more recent, no written record of it existing earlier than the 1980s.
'Wind up' in the sense used here...ie provoking someone into a misunderstanding as a practical joke...is much more recent, no written record of it existing earlier than the 1980s.
I meant, of course, that the meaning rather than the example dated to the 16th century, J! In fact, the earliest one recorded reads (modernised): "These merchants crack so much of themselves that I may also somewhat glory of myself."
As Grunty suggests, however, I've no doubt but that - even 'way back then - there were horsemen, for example, who scared ordinary punters whilst galloping through town. Old Will Shakespeare himself might have had occasion to exclaim to a companion in Stratford market-place: "Beware, good Launcelot, else yon speed merchant wilt have thee flatten�d!"
As Grunty suggests, however, I've no doubt but that - even 'way back then - there were horsemen, for example, who scared ordinary punters whilst galloping through town. Old Will Shakespeare himself might have had occasion to exclaim to a companion in Stratford market-place: "Beware, good Launcelot, else yon speed merchant wilt have thee flatten�d!"