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Re: Jimmy the lockPosted by James Briggs on September 18, 2003 In Reply to: Re: Jimmy the lock posted by James Briggs on September 18, 2003 : : : We were watching a crime thriller, when one of the clues was that the 'perp' 'jimmied the lock'. OK, I know what that means, but when I asked my partner how the term originated, he knowledgeably informed me that the 'perp' use a 'jimmy bar' to break in. : : : Fine. So I asked him what a 'jimmy bar' was and why it was so named - and he gave me that embarrassed, drop kick, oops - wish I'd never spoken look, and I realised he had no idea what the term meant or where it came from. : : : So does anyone know, either how the term 'jimmy the lock' originated, or what a 'jimmy bar' is? : : : Thanks for any answers. : : Over here in the UK it's jemmy rather than jimmy. A jemmy/jimmy is a short crowbar. That's just their name - don't know why, although I expect there was a real or imaginary bad guy called Jimmy involved. : My book of Etymology says 'Jemmy: burglar's crowbar. XIX. dim. name of James' Whoops! Gary -- sory, sorry. Mea Culpa.
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