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Good riddanceMeaningAn expression of pleasure on being rid of some annoyance - usually an individual. Origin'Riddance' is now so completely associated with this little phrase that it is rarely, if ever, seen out alone. The only sort of riddance on offer these days is a good one. It wasn't always thus. In the 16th century a riddance was a general-purpose noun and meant 'deliverance from' or 'getting rid of'. The first adjectives to be linked with the word were fayre/happy/gladsome and, in Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice, 1600, Portia wishes the Prince of Morocco 'a gentle riddance'. A very early use of riddance comes in John Rastell's poem, Away Mourning, circa 1525:
Shakespeare appears to be the coiner of 'good riddance', in Troilus and Cressida, 1606:
The phrase is often extended and emphasized as 'good riddance to bad rubbish' or, as that extended form was first coined, 'good riddance of bad rubbish'. Tobias Smollett used the phrase in a none too friendly comment, in The Critical Review, 1805:
See other phrases and sayings from Shakespeare. See other phrases that were coined in the USA. |