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Blog Post 2: From Battlefields to Boardrooms – Origins in Professions, War, & Nautical Lore

In Part 1, we explored idioms rooted in food, animals, and folklore. Now, we dive into expressions forged by history’s grittiest corners: wars, workplaces, and life at sea. These phrases carry legacies of innovation, survival, and cunning—proof that language is a living museum of human endeavour.


1. Bite the bullet

Origin: During the 1857 Indian Rebellion, British soldiers underwent battlefield surgeries without anesthesia. To endure pain, they bit down on lead bullets (not for sterilization, as myth suggests, but to muffle screams). The phrase later symbolized stoic endurance.

2. Pass the buck

Origin: In 19th-century poker games, a “buck” (often a buckhorn knife) marked whose turn it was to deal. Passing the buck shifted responsibility—until President Truman popularized “the buck stops here” to reject blame-shifting.

3. By and large

Origin: A 17th-century nautical term. “By” meant sailing into the wind; “large” meant sailing with it. Together, “by and large” meant a ship handled well in all conditions, evolving into a term for general assessment.

4. Read the Riot Act

Origin: After the 1714 Riot Act passed in Britain, authorities had to literally read a 40-word proclamation aloud before dispersing crowds. Failure to comply within an hour meant the death penalty—a draconian root for today’s reprimands.

5. Back to the drawing board

Origin: Coined in a 1941 New Yorker cartoon by Peter Arno. It depicted military engineers scrambling to redesign a failed plane, lampooning WWII-era bureaucratic blunders.

6. Break the ice

Origin: Dutch diplomats in the 1600s used het ijs breken (“break the ice”) to describe easing social tension. Later, literal icebreaker ships (1800s) reinforced the term for overcoming obstacles.

7. Bury the hatchet

Origin: Inspired by Iroquois and Algonquin peace rituals. Warring tribes literally buried axes to seal treaties—a practice documented in 17th-century colonial accounts, later romanticized in literature.

8. Jump on the bandwagon

Origin: 19th-century circuses paraded wagons with bands to lure crowds. Politicians like Theodore Roosevelt hopped onto these wagons mid-campaign, symbolizing opportunistic public alignment.

9. Bend over backwards

Origin: Medieval court jesters and Victorian-era contortionists performed backbends to entertain royalty. The physical feat became a metaphor for excessive effort to please.

10. Rule of thumb

Origin: Pre-industrial brewers tested fermentation temperature by dipping a thumb into vats. Later, carpenters used thumb widths for rough measurements—not, as falsely claimed, a law permitting wife-beating.

11. Steal someone’s thunder

Origin: Playwright John Dennis (1709) invented a tin thunder sheet for his play Appius and Virginia. Rivals later used his invention, prompting Dennis to rage, “They stole my thunder!”

12. Take with a grain of salt

Origin: Roman scholar Pliny the Elder claimed poison could be neutralized by adding a grain of salt. His Natural History (77 AD) advised skepticism: “addito salis grano” (“with a grain of salt”).

13. The ball is in your court

Origin: A 20th-century tennis metaphor. Early rulebooks urged players to “return the ball” promptly, evolving into a demand for decisive action in negotiations.

14. The last straw

Origin: From the proverb “the straw that broke the camel’s back,” referencing Middle Eastern caravans where overloading camels caused collapses. The “straw” symbolized minor, cumulative burdens.

15. Throw in the towel

Origin: Early 20th-century boxing trainers lobbed towels into rings to stop fights and protect battered fighters. The act of surrender was later adopted in business and politics.

16. Under the weather

Origin: Sick sailors were sent below deck to recover, sheltered from the punishing “weather side” of ships. The phrase literally meant protection from storms, not just feeling ill.

17. Wear your heart on your sleeve

Origin: Medieval knights tied their lady’s scarf or ribbon to their sleeves during jousts. The public display of loyalty (not emotion) was codified in chivalric rituals.

18. On the ball

Origin: 19th-century sailors had to stand “on the ball”—the curved base of ship masts—to keep balance during rough seas. It became slang for staying alert and competent.

19. Cut to the chase

Origin: Silent film directors in the 1920s prioritized action scenes (chases, fights) over dialogue. Screenwriters were told to “cut” boring plots and “get to the chase.”

20. At the drop of a hat

Origin: 1800s American frontier disputes were settled by duels or races. A hat dropped midair signaled the start—no countdown, just instant action.


From sailors’ slang to playwrights’ ploys, these idioms are time capsules of human ingenuity. Together, Parts 1 and 2 reveal how language is shaped by survival, creativity, and even mischief. Next time you “bite the bullet” or “steal thunder,” remember: you’re channeling centuries of history. Missed Part 1? Click here to explore bacon-fuelled marital bliss and sacred white elephants!

One response to “Idioms – Part Two”

  1. […] From buttered deities to cursed elephants, these phrases carry centuries of human ingenuity and superstition. But the rabbit hole goes deeper—Look for Part 2, which will explore idioms born from war, nautical lore, and professions, including why “biting bullets” was medical practice and how sailors stayed “under the weather.” Click here for part two! […]

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