What is the origin of "Concerned of Tunbridge Wells" - a possibly fictitious writer of letters to the editor? Can anyone dig out a definitive etymology for the term, or is it just a conflation of 'Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells'?
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Tunbridge Wells is a real town, and this expression derives from the name. This Wikipedia article relates the story:
So concerned of Tunbridge Wells refers to a concerned resident (figuratively) of Tunbridge Wells, as the name has come to connote critical feedback. The disgusted form outnumbers the concerned form on Google by about 5 to 1. As to the last question, I would say that it is quite unlikely that the concerned form is anything but an ameliorated conflation of the disgusted form; it carries the same meaning and follows the same etymology. |
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