Where does the phrase "a wide berth" as in "give it a wide berth", meaning lots of room, come from? I know it as a nautical term.
(Some of my female friends seem to think it's a chauvinistic reference to birth.)
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Where does the phrase "a wide berth" as in "give it a wide berth", meaning lots of room, come from? I know it as a nautical term. (Some of my female friends seem to think it's a chauvinistic reference to birth.) |
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the first definition for "berth" given in the Oxford English Dictionary is
with examples from 1622. The OED says of the word's etymology:
So the word berth is very likely closely related to birth; but this meaning is far removed from it. |
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'Berth' originally meant 'a place where there is sea room to moor a ship' which in turn was derived from 'bearing off'. So when sailors where asked to keep a wide bearing off something, they were asked to make sure there was enough sea room from it. From here, when accepted to general population, its meaning also became more general as in 'keep more distance from'. |
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Maybe this is just obvious, but the one part that no one's yet mentioned is why you'd want a wide berth: because (some) ships are heavy, slow-moving and unwieldy conveyances, especially compared to wagons, carts, horses, etc. With a narrow berth the ship or pier or other ships could be easily damaged, and generally there is a greater risk of loss of control of the situation. So it makes sense, then, that we urge people to give a wide berth, metaphorically, to other people that are unwieldy, out of control, generally uncontrollable, potentially dangerous, have a 'short fuse' or low anger threshold, etc. |
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