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Re: Double DutchPosted by Bruce Kahl on September 15, 2000 In Reply to: Re: Double Dutch posted by Bob on September 15, 2000 : : : We know what the phrase means but not how it originated. Any ideas welcome. : : : Reg : : : Ian Frame : : The "Morris Dictionary of Phrase and Word Origins" has a lengthy entry about the use of the word "Dutch" in phrases. "Probably no nationality has come in for so consistent a torrent of verbal abuse from the English as their neighbors across the channel the Dutch...It was not always thus. Until well after Shakespeare's time, the Dutch were usually well regarded in all literary references by British authors." Mr. and Mrs. Morris say "'Double dutch' is a kind of talk deliberately intended to deceive the listener." : There's also the urban jump-rope game Double Dutch, very popular with African American girls, where two ropes are twirled in opposite directions by two girls, and one jumps in the center. How did that name arise? To the unaccustomed ear, Dutch appears to be constituted of grunts and growls, occasionally added snarls and k-sounds which some would hear as double talk which became known as double dutch! Strangely enough the development of the English language is the cause of today's problems with Dutch word order and pronunciation. If William the Conqueror would have stayed home in Normandy in 1066 nothing would have happened and the Dutch would still be speaking more or less the same language. But, he didn't and defeated the British at the Battle of Hastings. From that day on, French was the official language among nobility, gentry and the upper classes for almost two hundred years. The commoners, however, continued to speak English. But, when English was reinstated in the 14th century as the official language of Britain, it had by then changed too much to still resemble Dutch. . Dutch comfort=cold comfort |