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Hold a candleMeaningTo compare badly to an known authority - to be unfit even to hold a subordinate position. OriginApprentices used to be expected to hold the candle so that more experienced workmen were able to see what they were doing. Someone unable even to do that would be of low status indeed. Sir Edward Dering used a similar phrase 'to hold the candle' in his The fower cardinal-vertues of a Carmelite fryar, 1641:
'To hold a candle' is first recorded in 1883 in William Norris's No New Thing:
Tudor Phrases and Sayings - a book on the meanings and origins of the phrases and sayings that Shakespeare and Henry VIII used that we use still use every day. |