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Printed from https://writing.com/main/books/entry_id/1072557-Phrase-Shift
Rated: 18+ · Book · Personal · #1196512
Not for the faint of art.
#1072557 added June 12, 2024 at 11:01am
Restrictions: None
Phrase Shift
I tend to be skeptical about the sort of thing featured in this article from Mental Floss, because there's a lot of fauxtymology out there, and I've called out a bunch of it in here before ("tip," for example, which most definitely did not start out as an acronym for "to insure promptness" but that crap keeps getting repeated as truth). So I'll just note, by way of disclaimer, that I can't guarantee that all of these are true.

    The Racist Origins of 7 Common Phrases  Open in new Window.
From ‘cakewalk’ to ‘no can do,’ the origins of these common idioms and sayings are surprisingly dark.


Even the most nonsensical idioms in the English language originated somewhere.

I could get pedantic about it and note that the true "origin" stretches all the way back to whatever proto-language our distant ancestors used to hunt antelopes or whatever, but I think I can stick to the intent of the article, here.

While these common phrases are rarely used in their original contexts today, knowing their racist origins casts them in a different light.

Let's also point out that meanings and connotations change over time, like how the swastika was once a symbol of peace and harmony and now... it's not. It can go the other way, too, from bad to innocuous or good. If someone calls you "nice," that doesn't mean they think you're foolish. Necessarily.

1. Tipping Point

No, this isn't directly related to the gratuity kind of tipping.

In the 1950s, as white people abandoned urban areas for the suburbs in huge numbers, journalists began using the phrase tipping point in relation to the percentage of non-white neighbors it took to trigger this reaction in white city residents.

I'm still not sure if that's racist in itself, or just calling out racism. Given that it was the 1950s, it could go either way.

Tipping point wasn’t coined in the 1950s (it first appeared in print in the 19th century), but it did enter everyday speech during the decade thanks to this topic.

So it's not really an origin. And if you use "tipping point" in relation to, say, climate change, that doesn't make you racist, either.

It's a fairly common and descriptive term in other areas of science, too. Like, maybe, the stress at which steel stops acting elastically and starts to deform permanently.

2. Long Time, No See

In contrast, this one is clearly and deliberately racist.

According to the Oxford English Dictionary, this type of isolating construction would have been unusual for the indigenous languages of North America. Rather, it originated as a way for white writers to mock Native American speech, and that of non-native English speakers from other places like China. By the 1920s, it had become an ordinary part of the American vernacular.

Other sources emphasize the Chinese immigrant stereotype over the Native American one.

3. Mumbo Jumbo

In the Mandinka language, the word Maamajomboo described a masked dancer who participated in ceremonies.


Hardly the first, or last, word or phrase mangled from another language, though other sources peg it as "uncertain origin." While it does reflect a disdain for African language on the part of colonials, if you want to get technical about it like I did way up there, all our words have African origins.

4. Sold Down the River

Before the phrase sold down the river meant betrayal, it originated as a literal slave-trading practice.


So, yeah, not great, and there's more about it here.  Open in new Window.

A roughly equivalent expression of betrayal is "thrown under a bus," which, given the implied violence, I'm not sure is much better.

5. No Can Do

Similar to long time, no see, no can do originated as a jab at non-native English speakers.


This one was more explicitly mocking Chinese-Americans.

6. Indian Giver

Merriam-Webster defines an Indian giver as “a person who gives something to another and then takes it back.”


I think even Kid Me recognized that this phrase was culturally inappropriate. It's pretty damn obvious from the "Indian" part of the name, which didn't refer to Asian Indians.

7. Cakewalk

In the antebellum South, some enslaved Black Americans spent Sundays dressing up and performing dances in the spirit of mocking the white upper classes. The enslavers didn’t know they were the butt of the joke, and even encouraged these performances and rewarded the best dancers with cake, hence the name.


As this one was about getting one over on the oppressors, I'm not sure it's such a bad thing.

Anyway, I've tried to avoid using the obvious ones. As writers, I think it's important to know the tools (words and phrases) we're working with, and make more deliberate decisions about them. Hence my sharing of this list. Besides, a lot of them are cliché anyway.

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Printed from https://writing.com/main/books/entry_id/1072557-Phrase-Shift