Fish Idioms
Here
at Wordmonger I’ve had a fine time celebrating dog idioms, dish idioms, walking idioms, skin idioms, & idioms made from the words
in the title of John Green’s novel, The Fault in Our Stars. This week it’s time for
idioms based around the word fish, a word that takes up nearly
three full pages of the Oxford English Dictionary.
Big fish in a small pond is an idiom started in America in the early 1880s.
Many people prefer being the big fish in a small pond,
although escaping into the larger sea can have its advantages.
Though
Chaucer included the term “a fish that is waterless” in Canterbury Tales in the late 1300s, the first time the term a
fish out of water appeared in print seems to be three centuries later.
You might say it’s the rare bird who
enjoys feeling like a fish out of water, though I have appreciated that
situation many times – a year in American Samoa as one of the few palagi on the island, a couple of years
as the only Anglo in the Cal State Northridge Pan African Studies Gospel Choir,
the list goes on…
There
is, of course, the possibility that the fish in the water think of the fish
out of water as queer fish, a British idiom that
appeared in 1919, applied to anyone who might appear odd or eccentric.
Etymologists
argue about the origins of fine kettle of fish (& its sibling,
pretty kettle of fish). Some are moderately certain the idiom was born
of a Scottish term kettle of fish, which referred to a picnic of sorts, in which
the local landholder invited his minions to enjoy a day off work. This event
called for the minions to light a fire on the riverbank, suspend a giant kettle
over it, catch fresh fish, cook them in the kettle, and serve them to the visiting
nobles. No one is certain how the theoretically positive experience could have
collected a negative connotation, but I do wonder about those “lucky” minions
who were invited to do all the work. Other etymologists suggest a
pretty kettle of fish may have originated as a pretty kiddle of fish. Kiddle
was a word used to refer to nets thrown across a river to catch the
fish. Perhaps when the catch was particularly successful (or pretty),
hauling in a bunch of flapping, unhappy fish made a bit of a mess? The jury is
out & sparring etymologists continue to duke it out.
In
1660, John Evelyn first penned the idiom bigger fish to fry, which may be the
sort of thing that leads a big fish in a small pond to venture
into the larger sea, where he may feel like a queer fish, or a fish
out of water, or might
discover that life out of his little pond is a pretty kettle of fish.
What
other fish idioms can you add to the list? Please leave a comment suggesting an
idiom or two.
My thanks go out to this week’s
sources: the OED, Etymonline. Barron’s Handbook of Commonly Used American Idioms, Literary
Exchange, Phrases.org, Wordvia.com, The
Hindu.com, Wise Geek, Phrases.org, & Wordnik
The origins of some of these idioms seem a little fishy to me...
ReplyDeleteLet's sea, can I come up with any more? I like thinking of idioms like this, just for the halibut. But my hands are tide; you've come up with all the ones I know! I guess I'll just wave goodbye and swim away for now!
Howdy Rachel,
ReplyDeleteThanks for swimming through, but after inflicting that many puns on us, shouldn't you be feeling gill-ty?
Thanks :)
ReplyDeleteThanks, Mr. Perryess! Love the etymology. It reminds me of the "fishmonger" post. :)
ReplyDeleteMany of my freshman also love the book The Fault in Our Stars, so it was interesting to see that connection on your blog.
Dearest Ms. Turner,
ReplyDeleteThanks for virtually visiting. As to Fault in Our Stars, it's brilliant. John Green knocks my socks off.
Perryess, this big fish small pond piece is really directed towards places that I live in. For example, there are athletes here that succeed greatly in the small town, but once they experience the big pond, they are lost with actions. Thanks for the post!
ReplyDelete