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The English language is full of sayings or idioms that, on the face of it, don鈥檛 make a lot of sense.

If you heard something 鈥榝rom the horse鈥檚 mouth鈥, why is it particularly reliable? Why are we 鈥榰nder the weather鈥 when we鈥檙e ill? And how could anyone 鈥榮teal someone else鈥檚 thunder鈥?

In many cases the answers have unusual, and often disputed, origins. Here are the stories behind five common sayings.

A blue bowl of dried white beans on a grey table.
Image caption,
Ancient Greeks used black and white beans to count votes

Spill the beans

There are a few explanations for why we might say someone 鈥榮pilled the beans鈥 when they revealed something before it was meant to be known.

Some accounts have it originating in the United States in the early 20th Century, when it meant to upset or disturb a stable situation.

But the most commonly accepted is that it originated thousands of years ago in Ancient Greece, where votes were made by placing either a white or a black bean in a vase, depending on whether they meant yes or no. The beans were later counted to reveal the result.

But if the vase was accidentally (or deliberately) knocked over, the beans would be visible to everyone, and the result would be known before it was meant to be. Hence you鈥檇 鈥榮pilled the beans鈥.

A blue bowl of dried white beans on a grey table.
Image caption,
Ancient Greeks used black and white beans to count votes
A white horse with its mouth lightly open, showing its teeth. A green field and blue sky are in the background.
Image caption,
Honest horse? Equine teeth might be the source of this common phrase

Straight from the horse鈥檚 mouth

When we say we heard something 鈥榮traight from the horse鈥檚 mouth鈥 we mean that we trust the information to be reliable because it came from someone who would know. So where did our equine friends get this admirable reputation for truth-telling? Well, there are a couple of explanations.

One is that it seems to have originated in racing circles as a kind of joke. A good betting tip was said to have come 鈥榮traight from the horse鈥檚 mouth鈥, since the horse would know best what kind of chances it had in the race.

But another explanation is to do with horse teeth. When selling a horse, the owner might lie about its age. Since the only totally reliable way of determining a horse鈥檚 age is examining its incisors, the truth about the horse鈥檚 age is best checked by looking in its mouth. So the truth comes 鈥榮traight from the horse鈥檚 mouth鈥.

To complicate matters, the phrase 鈥榥ever look a gift horse in the mouth鈥 is also often said to have its origins in this dental method of ageing horses.

A white horse with its mouth lightly open, showing its teeth. A green field and blue sky are in the background.
Image caption,
Honest horse? Equine teeth might be the source of this common phrase
An old engraving showing Admiral Nelson with a telescope in his hands.
Image caption,
Not seeing is believing. Admiral Nelson famously put a telescope to his blind eye

To turn a blind eye

The idea of turning a blind eye to something that you don't want to admit having seen goes back as far as 1698, when clergyman John Norris used the phrase in his book A Discourse of Walking by Faith.

But the phrase really gained popular currency about 100 years later, after the Battle of Copenhagen in 1801, when Admiral Nelson was ordered to disengage the Danish fleet by Admiral Sir Hyde Parker. Nelson didn鈥檛 want to obey the order, so put a telescope to his blind eye and said that he could not see the signal.

Despite its earlier uses, this is the explanation that is most often given for the meaning of the phrase, as well as its current popularity.

An old engraving showing Admiral Nelson with a telescope in his hands.
Image caption,
Not seeing is believing. Admiral Nelson famously put a telescope to his blind eye
Thunder bolts in a dark purple sky.
Image caption,
Thunder theft. This odd phrase has its origins in British theatre

To steal someone's thunder

When you 鈥榮teal someone鈥檚 thunder鈥, you pre-empt someone鈥檚 else鈥檚 achievement with one of your own, thus robbing them of the praise they might have got.

The phrase originates in a story from the 18th Century, when playwright John Dennis invented a new machine called a thunder sheet for creating storm sounds on stage for his play Appius and Virginia (1709).

Sadly, the cutting-edge special effects weren鈥檛 enough to save the play, which was a flop. But later, Dennis heard that the same venue - Theatre Royal, Drury Lane - was using his machine for a production of Macbeth without his permission. According to the story, the furious writer declared: 鈥淭he villains will play my thunder but not my plays!鈥

They had 鈥榮tolen his thunder鈥.

Thunder bolts in a dark purple sky.
Image caption,
Thunder theft. This odd phrase has its origins in British theatre
Antique engraving of a sailing ship at sea in stormy weather.
Image caption,
Seasick? The saying 鈥榰nder the weather鈥 has nautical origins

To be under the weather

We often say someone is 鈥榝eeling a bit under the weather鈥 when they have a mild illness or are just not feeling 100%. But why would we phrase it that way? The saying鈥檚 origins go back to Britain鈥檚 seafaring past, although the precise explanation is very difficult to pin down exactly.

In the days of sailing ships, the weather bow or rail was the part of the ship that faced directly into bad weather. During a storm this was the worst place to be, since it was most buffeted by the wind. So the original saying was 鈥榰nder the weather bow鈥 which meant in a poor situation or ill and it later became shortened to 鈥榰nder the weather鈥.

There鈥檚 a competing explanation that claims that ill sailors would be sent below deck to recover - they were said to be sent 'under the weather rail' which is where the connection with illness may come from.

And yet another explanation is that the phrase originates from the fact that when a ship pulled into port because of a storm, it docked 鈥榰nder stress of weather鈥. So being 鈥榰nder the weather鈥 was connected with being in some sort of trouble.

It鈥檚 a complicated story that suggests that sometimes common sayings might not have just one source.

This article was published in December 2023

Antique engraving of a sailing ship at sea in stormy weather.
Image caption,
Seasick? The saying 鈥榰nder the weather鈥 has nautical origins

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