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Re: A mere bagatelle my dearPosted by Bookworm on November 12, 2004 In Reply to: Re: A mere bagatelle my dear posted by Bruce Kahl on November 12, 2004 : : The radio announcer was reading a commercial involving bagatelles and then ad libbed: "it's a mere bagatelle my dear". Is this a famous line from a play or book? Or, is it just a phrase? An admittedly quick Google search didn't give me a source. It did, however, confirm that this phrase is indeed used to denote a trifle. : Could it be a "mere bag of shells"? No, the phrase is indeed "a mere bagatelle, my dear". I was just wondering if it was used in a literary work. According to Webster's online dictionary: Bagatelle 2. Something of little value or significance. 3. (British) a table game in which short cues are used to knock balls into holes that are guarded by wooden pegs; penalties are incurred if the pegs are knocked over. Etymology: Bagatelle \Bag`a*telle"\, noun. [French expression, from Italian bagatella; compare to Prov. Italian bagata trifle, Old French bague, Pr. bagua, bundle. See Bag, noun.]. |